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Average Premiums For Homeowners And Renters Insurance By State, 2015 (1)

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  Homeowners Renters   Homeowners Renters
State Average premium (2) Rank (3) Average premium (4) Rank (3) State Average premium (2) Rank (3) Average premium (4) Rank (3)
Alabama $1,358 12 $242 3 Montana $1,081 25 $147 45
Alaska 982 32 172 27 Nebraska 1,360 11 149 43
Arizona 810 45 191 17 Nevada 737 48 189 19
Arkansas 1,312 14 235 6 New Hampshire 941 36 150 42
California (5) 986 30 202 10 New Jersey 1,149 21 171 29
Colorado 1,383 9 166 31 New Mexico 982 32 191 17
Connecticut 1,411 8 201 12 New York 1,287 15 202 10
Delaware 780 46 156 35 North Carolina 1,075 26 154 39
D.C. 1,196 19 158 34 North Dakota 1,200 18 114 51
Florida 1,993 1 195 15 Ohio 819 43 185 21
Georgia 1,152 20 226 7 Oklahoma 1,879 4 242 3
Hawaii 1,014 29 201 12 Oregon 643 51 166 31
Idaho 692 49 155 37 Pennsylvania 913 38 156 35
Illinois 1,033 28 173 26 Rhode Island 1,446 7 179 24
Indiana 983 31 183 22 South Carolina 1,284 16 192 16
Iowa 919 37 146 47 South Dakota 1,096 23 121 50
Kansas 1,531 5 177 25 Tennessee 1,149 21 210 8
Kentucky 1,062 27 172 27 Texas (6) 1,991 2 241 5
Louisiana 1,945 3 249 2 Utah 673 50 149 43
Maine 843 42 147 45 Vermont 873 41 155 37
Maryland 982 32 161 33 Virginia 946 35 153 40
Massachusetts 1,379 10 196 14 Washington 811 44 169 30
Michigan 908 39 203 9 West Virginia 907 40 186 20
Minnesota 1,323 13 144 48 Wisconsin 750 47 132 49
Mississippi 1,508 6 262 1 Wyoming 1,088 24 153 40
Missouri 1,253 17 180 23 United States $1,173   $188  
(1) Includes state funds, residual markets and some wind pools. (2) Based on the HO-3 homeowner package policy for owner-occupied dwellings, 1 to 4 family units. Provides all risk coverage (except those specifically excluded in the policy) on buildings and broad named-peril coverage on personal property, and is the most common package written. (3) Ranked from highest to lowest. States with the same premium receive the same rank. (4) Based on the HO-4 renters insurance policy for tenants. Includes broad named-peril coverage for the personal property of tenants. (5) Data provided by the California Department of Insurance. (6) The Texas Department of Insurance developed home insurance policy forms that are similar but not identical to the standard forms. In addition, due to the Texas Windstorm Association (which writes wind-only policies) classifying HO-1, 2 and 5 premiums as HO-3, the average premium for homeowners insurance is artificially high. Note: Average premium=Premiums/exposure per house years. A house year is equal to 365 days of insured coverage for a single dwelling. The NAIC does not rank state average expenditures and does not endorse any conclusions drawn from this data. Source: © 2017 National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC). Reprinted with permission. Further reprint or distribution strictly prohibited without written permission of NAIC.