Lawmakers Look Into Rising Insurance Costs

WASHINGTON (NEXSTAR) - With natural disasters striking communities across the country, lawmakers are examining the rapidly rising cost of insurance and whether sweeping changes are needed to protect homeowners from financial devastation.
Jessica Pyska, County of Lake, California Supervisor, shared her experience with lawmakers.
"The Valley Fire burned 76,000 acres, nearly 2,000 structures, and claimed four lives," she said. "I lost my home and most of my community that day."
While federal grants and incentive programs have helped communities rebuild, Pyska said the skyrocketing cost of insurance remains a major burden.
"Despite these investments, we continue to be crushed by the insurance crisis plaguing our nation," she said.
The Senate is now reviewing both home and flood insurance costs. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) called the situation a bipartisan issue.
"Housing is already too expensive for many Americans, and even if families can afford to buy a home, they then get stuck with whopping insurance bills," Warren said.
According to the Treasury Department, as of January 2025, premiums in climate-vulnerable areas were 82% higher than those in the least risky regions.
"Average home insurance rates across the nation have increased by double digits 23% overall," Warren said.
Still, Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) said overly complex regulations are creating barriers for insurers to operate in certain states.
"We must be honest about the multiple factors driving the rise in catastrophic losses from local mitigation and policy failures to market distortions created by counterproductive regulations," Scott said.
Robert Gordon, a American Property Casualty Insurance Association Senior VP, warned insurers will pull back from markets they find unprofitable.
"They're not going to keep putting in new money into states where they're not able to increase their capital, and they haven't been profitable enough to attract new capital," Gordon said.
Lawmakers from both parties agreed the system needs reform to ensure affordability and access, but how and when those changes will happen remains uncertain.
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