from what I've read Florida leads the nation in insurance related problems from carriers going bellyup into receivership, to packing up and leaving
before that happens, to not writing policies anymore, to some fake carriers writing fake policies & collecting all the money they can before the shit hits the fan. It's an economic disaster mostly brought on due to natural disasters which they've had to contend with over the decades but also due to unscrupulous and shady activities also. Bottom line is the industry is in trouble and the state run insurer of last resort in Florida, according to what I've read, cannot cover its obligations if the state gets hit hard with another hurricane.
Other states like California are in a similar boat due to the same type of issues though I think the fraud is a lesser issue out there as compared to Florida. Throw all coastal states in the mix, particularly those on the gulf & up through the Carolinas, they'll be seeing some form of this more & more.
At the end of the day it is what it is, these carriers are businesses that have to be profitable to survive, & putting all the shenanigans that go on aside, there can be no doubt that the natural disasters that go hand in hand with
living in paradise are a massive factor in these rate increases & cancelled policies - add in the dramatic uptick in replacement costs & labor costs (& appraised values) & you've got a recipe for real hard times ahead as related to insurance costs in these areas.
We're seeing the same thing play out in auto insurance for some similar reasons; inflation/replacement costs of cars & their parts that all seemed to magically double in price over the course of the 2020's along with a dramatic uptick in uninsured vehicles on the road & what you get are increased payouts by carriers with fewer payors among which to spread the pain.
I don't see any of this getting any better, rather the opposite is far more probable.
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