LexisNexis U.S. Home Trends Report Highlights Impact of Severe Storms as Catastrophic Claims Climb to Record Levels

In This Article:

2024 LexisNexis Home Trends Report highlights why home insurance has increased for homeowners as loss costs across all perils rise for the fifth year in a row

ATLANTA, Oct. 16, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- LexisNexis? Risk Solutions today released its ninth annual LexisNexis U.S. Home Trends Report, providing an updated view of by-peril trends in the U.S. home insurance industry to help insurers make more informed business decisions to be better positioned for profitable growth, and help them educate consumers on home insurance trends that impact their policies. In addition to insights into loss cost, frequency and severity, the report includes details about seasonality, distribution of catastrophe claims and geographic trends.

Weather-related perils by state
Weather-related perils by state

Key Takeaways

  • All Peril lost cost and frequency increased by 4.1% and 11%, respectively, from 2022 to 2023 and 52% and 16.9%, respectively, since 2019.

  • While severity has declined 6.3% since 2022, it remains 29.8% higher than 2019 figures.

  • Catastrophe claims represented 46% of claims across all perils combined in 2023, the highest in seven years.

  • Hail loss cost increased 57.9% since 2022, along with frequency (up 53.6%) and severity rising 2.8% year over year from 2022. States with the highest impact of hail-related perils include Colorado, Nebraska and Wyoming.

  • Lost cost for other weather-related perils declined across Fire and Lightning (down 11.1%) and Weather-Related Water (down 51.4%) from 2022-2023. Non-Weather-Related Water loss cost decreased by 11.2% in the same period but remained on an upward trend over the past seven years.

"In the last year, the U.S. saw several historic-level weather disaster events and the highest level of catastrophic claims across all perils we've seen in the past seven years, which contributes to rising premiums that consumers across the country face right now," said Cole Winans, vice president, home insurance, LexisNexis Risk Solutions. "As home insurance carriers continue to contend with seasonal and geographic variabilities related to climate – in addition to rising inflation, material and labor costs – understanding by-peril and macro level home insurance trends coupled with maintaining extensive data and imagery on current house conditions over an extended period of time is imperative to remain nimble in today's volatile and dynamic market. Even as more insurers are likely to see rate increases approved in certain states in the coming months, they will need to be discerning in writing new business only in those pockets where they can do so profitably and that will be on a carrier-by-carrier and state-by-state basis."