Data obtained by NBC 5 Investigates reveals just how much companies are raising insurance rates after years of massive storm-related losses By Scott Friedman , Eva Parks , Edward Ayala and Frank Heinz • Published July 30, 2024 • Updated on July 30, 2024 at 11:04 pm If it feels like homeowners’ insurance premiums have gone through the roof, and in some cases look more like mortgage payments, it's probably not your imagination. Data obtained by NBC 5 Investigates reveals just how dramatically rates are rising across Texas and what homeowners might be able to do to lower their premiums. Destructive weather is part of living in North Texas. Melinda Clifton has seen hail damage her roof three times in two decades. After each storm, homeowners' insurance paid her claims to replace it. But not long after her most recent claim, she received a bill that hit like a hurricane. Need a Homeowners quote?? Get yours tod...
By Megan Kimble and Caroline Ghisolfi | Dec. 4, 2024 5:00 a.m. When Maryann McGregor retired in 2020, she and her husband considered downsizing and selling their four-bedroom home in Clear Lake to their adult son. The couple had lived there for nearly four decades, and the house was paid off. Then their home insurance bills started to skyrocket. Two carriers stopped providing coverage, and Allstate, which had been charging them $3,300 in 2020, is no longer writing new policies in their zip code. Now they’re paying $8,000 for a policy from a little-known start-up. Their wind and hail deductible has jumped to $28,400 — twice what they paid to replace the roof last year. Paying too much on home insurance? Get a better rate today McGregor worries about burdening her son with the new costs. “It would be a huge impact on him to have that big insurance bill on top of the tax bills,” she said. “The insurance is more than the taxes now.” Homeowners like McGr...
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