Florida homeowners insurance is the most expensive in the United States in 2026, with the statewide average running roughly $11,759 per year — nearly five times the national average of $2,377.
But the headline number hides enormous variation: a wind-mitigated inland home in Ocala or Lakeland may pay under $2,500, while a coastal Miami-Dade or Palm Beach property can top $5,000 to $7,000 for the same dwelling value.
This 2026 guide breaks down what drives those numbers, what the latest legislative reforms mean for your renewal, and the specific steps a Florida homeowners insurance agent uses to find you the lowest premium.
What Florida home insurance actually covers in 2026
A standard HO-3 policy in Florida bundles four main coverages: dwelling (the structure itself), other structures (detached garage, fence, shed), personal property (your belongings), and liability (if someone is injured on your property).
It also includes loss of use, which pays for temporary housing if your home becomes uninhabitable after a covered loss. Hurricane and windstorm damage are typically included, but subject to a separate hurricane deductible calculated as a percentage of dwelling coverage (commonly 2%, 5%, or 10%) rather than a flat dollar amount.
Flooding from storm surge, rising water, or rainfall accumulation is nevercovered by a standard policy — even during a hurricane. That requires a separate NFIP or private flood policy. The same goes for full sinkhole coverage (Florida law mandates only “catastrophic ground cover collapse” by default; full sinkhole protection is an optional endorsement).
The 2026 average cost — and why it varies so much by city
Bankrate’s 2026 analysis pegs the Florida statewide average at approximately $11,759 per year for $300,000 in dwelling coverage.
For context, the same coverage costs about $2,377 nationally and roughly $7,809 in Louisiana, the second-most-expensive state. Here’s how a $300K-dwelling premium typically ranges across major Florida markets in 2026:
- Miami–Dade county: $5,300–$7,500 (high wind exposure, dense claims history)
- Tampa Bay / St. Petersburg: $4,000–$5,800 (storm surge zones)
- Orlando / Lake County: $2,200–$3,400 (inland, lower wind exposure)
- Jacksonville / Duval: $2,800–$4,200
- Ocala / Marion: $1,800–$2,400 (lowest in the state)
- Naples / Fort Myers: $4,500–$6,800 (post-Hurricane Ian rate corrections still flowing through)
What changed in 2025–2026: legislative reforms and refunds
Florida’s 2022–2023 insurance reforms (SB 2A and SB 76) eliminated one-way attorney fee provisions, restricted assignment of benefits (AOB) litigation, and raised the minimum hurricane deductible cap.
The result: the litigation share of Florida claims has dropped sharply, carrier appetite has returned, and Citizens Property Insurance — the state-backed insurer of last resort — has been actively depopulating policies back to private carriers throughout 2025 and into 2026.
Several Floridians are also seeing one-time refunds from the $1 billion auto insurance reform refund program, which is separate but signals the broader regulatory climate is improving for consumers.
The practical effect for 2026: rate increases that averaged 30–45% in 2022–2024 have flattened to single-digit increases (or in some inland markets, flat-to-slightly-down renewals) for properly inspected homes with newer roofs.
The seven factors that decide YOUR premium
- Roof age and shape. The single biggest variable. Most Florida carriers will not renew a shingle roof older than 15–17 years (tile/metal gets more leeway). A new roof can cut premium 15–30% overnight.
- Wind-mitigation credits. A licensed Florida wind-mitigation inspection ($75–$150) documents features like hip roof, secondary water resistance, shutters, and roof-to-wall connections. Credits can total 30–45% off the wind portion of your premium.
- Distance to the coast. Properties within 1 mile of saltwater pay the most; 5–10 miles inland is a major rate break.
- Dwelling reconstruction cost. Not market value — insurers price on the cost to rebuild from the foundation up, which has risen 18% nationwide since 2022 due to materials inflation.
- Claims history. Two claims in three years often triggers non-renewal or a 25%+ surcharge, even for small water-damage events.
- Insurance score. Florida allows credit-based insurance scoring (with some restrictions); higher scores can save 10–20%.
- Deductible structure. Choosing a 5% hurricane deductible instead of 2% can drop annual premium $400–$900 on a $300K home.
How to lower your premium in 2026 — nine concrete tactics
- Pull a fresh wind-mitigation report if yours is older than five years. Code changes and roof updates may have unlocked new credits.
- Bundle home + auto with the same carrier — typical multi-policy discount is 10–25%.
- Raise the AOP deductible from $1,000 to $2,500. Modest annual savings ($150–$300) for households that rarely file small claims.
- Install a central monitored alarm and water-leak sensors. Most carriers credit 5–10%.
- Re-shop annually. Florida has 30+ active homeowners carriers in 2026 (a sharp rebound from the 2022 low). The cheapest carrier rarely stays cheapest two years in a row.
- Ask about a private flood quote separately from NFIP — private carriers like Neptune and Wright often beat NFIP on newer or elevated structures.
- Verify your home is NOT over-insured. Many policies still carry pre-pandemic reconstruction values that inflated automatically; an updated replacement-cost estimator can save 5–15%.
- Check Citizens Depopulation offers if you’re currently on Citizens. Private take-out carriers must match coverage at no more than a 20% premium increase.
- Improve your insurance score. Pay credit cards on time, keep utilization below 30%, and the next renewal can reflect a meaningful discount.
What to do if you receive a non-renewal notice
Florida law (s. 627.4133) requires carriers to give you at least 120 days’ written notice before non-renewal of a homeowners policy. Don’t panic, and don’t let your policy lapse. Here’s the playbook:
- Identify the specific reason cited (roof age, claims, underwriting risk — it must be in the notice).
- Fix what you can fix. If it’s roof age, get quotes for replacement; some carriers will reinstate with proof of work scheduled.
- Start shopping immediately — not at day 119. Quality carriers fill quota fast on quality risks.
- If the private market won’t take you, Citizens Property Insurance is the state-backed option of last resort; an agent can write you there.
A local homeowners insurance agent has direct access to 20+ Florida carriers and can usually find replacement coverage within 7–14 days for properly maintained homes.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the average cost of homeowners insurance in Florida in 2026?
Does Florida homeowners insurance cover hurricane damage?
Why is Florida home insurance so expensive in 2026?
How can I lower my Florida homeowners insurance in 2026?
The Florida market in 2026 is more competitive than it has been in five years. Don’t accept your renewal letter at face value — find a local GreatFlorida Insurance agent in your city and have them re-shop your policy before you sign.



