The skyrocketing cost of insurance premiums in Florida is leading residents to drop their insurance, consider selling their home, and even move out of the state, according to recent reports.
For years now, the sunny, vibrant state has been a magnetic destination for many Americans—a phenomenon which has been driving up demand for housing, especially during the pandemic, as well as home prices.
But while Florida was the number one state in the country that people moved to in 2022, it was also the one with the highest number of residents wanting to relocate, according to a SelfStorage.
Can we build a wall to prevent them crossing the border to America?
Doesn’t matter to me, they think I live in a third world communist hell hole so they won’t move where I live anyway. Never thought I would say this but… thank you Fox News!
Let’s use a large wood saw and just disconnect the entire peninsula
Bugs did nothing wrong
Bugs bunny or the arachnids of klendathu?
They got Buenos Aires, not Florida. Unless I missed that bit in Starship Troopers. Maybe in the book? Haven’t read it in years.
Yeah it was BA in the book too.
It’s just a joke on “bugs”.
Don’t be ridiculous. A bunch of little saws will do just fine
Maybe we can cut the whole peninsula off and refer to it as the Great Castration.
Just be brownish, and you’ll get a free flight to New England!
A seawall.
…and Cuba’s gonna pay for it.
You can’t build a seawall on deteriorating limestone, that’s why Miami is doomed.
It’s a good thing their Republican Leaders are working hard to help them with this issue.
Obviously woke insurance companies are to blame!
Create legislation to fix your actual problem? Pfffft. I will offer you a new meaningless word instead, a word you can wield like a sword at the thanksgiving table. A word to most assuredly own the libs!
The weather doesn’t listen to legislators.
Won’t stop them from trying! The general assembly in NC literally outlawed taking ocean rise into account for determining insurance rates 🤣
Sell their homes to who? Is this like a NFT, always a bigger fool, kind of thing?
Fucking Aquaman?
To landlords, who will charge arbitrarily high rent, secure in the knowledge that they aren’t in a free market due to inelasticity of demand (people can’t do without shelter) and supply (there are finite places to live). That will let them pay the insurance premiums homeowners can’t afford.
Premiums they will then offload onto renters keeping their margins.
Landlords are not immune from the market. It’s not truly inelastic in that people have a choice of where to live. Climate change will eventually suppress demand and thus prices for many parts of Florida.
Smart Florida money is buying land in northern Maine to move the orange groves to.
Republicans who want to jerk off to DeSantis and let some racial slurs fly without social opprobrium.
That’s who has been moving there since 2020 or so.
Some people see Florida as America’s floppy, deformed penis. Others see it more as a nauseating dookie emerging from the south. Scientists are still studying the area to find the causes of the mass psychosis, but urge all healthy adults to avoid the region and its inhabitants.
Nah just spin it up into a bunch of naked credit default obligations and mix it in with the A and AA tranches, what could go wrong?
Whatever it takes to finally get people to realize that living in a disaster zone is a terrible idea.
How many more years before all of Earth is a disaster zone?
20
How very optimistic of you.
The old folks home is gonna be lit. Can’t wait.
The home or the Ättestupa?
Depends on how far out the astroid is
Don’t look up.
The current crisis isn’t so much about climate change as it is an insurance market so rampant with fraudulent roof damage claims that the market can’t bear it. FL legislature tried to correct this but before the law took effect a flood of claims were filed.
Climate change will only make this worse, ofc.
My understanding is that the substantial majority of roof damage claims were legitimate and attributable to predatory roofing companies that would finance and install new roofs after a storm at a huge discount, they’d install a shitty fucked up roof, then would sell the debt to a third party servicer, and then the roofing company would close up shop, rebrand under a new name, and do it again. By the time the roof fails, the original company is long gone leaving the homeowner and the insurers holding the bag.
The legislature and the insurers realized they had a impending consumer crisis and loosened the laws about paying these claims, and essentially opened the door to the fraud.
I wonder if the real issue at this point is that Florida just attracts fraudsters. It was their laws that allowed contractors to have a revolving door of LLC’s.
I’m sure more deregulation is the answer.
Free market win?
I mean rebuilding houses in regions every 5-20 years was never gonna come out on top.
Not being able to sell them (except for 10 cents on the dollar of what they paid) when they cannot be insured will be the next shock.
Yeah we saw that happen in places like Detroit during the recession, but I doubt it’ll get quite that bad ($100 homes) since Florida at least has good weather going for it.
The weather is literally the issue here.
Oh come on. We live in a house built in the 1940s, and I moved to this house from one built in the 1920s that is still in good shape. It’s not like all the houses are knocked down and rebuilt every 15 years, but that is how the insurance is priced.
Insurance is partly like gambling, the house always wins, right? They want to make money. Whatever the highest amount allowed by law is, that is what they charge.
It’s interesting to me that insurance companies are becoming the chief drivers of the preparation for climate change: “Wanna build a house in the woods? On a sandbar? GTFO. Use your own money.”
Since humans invented math and fossil fuels, this moment was inevitable. The writing has been on the wall in Florida for ten years.
I forgot the actual statistics, but it’s something crazy. Like Florida constitutes 8% of the country’s homeowners insurance policies, but 80% of all homeowners insurance litigation. Florida real estate is a ponzi scheme now.
They’ve got miles and miles and miles of roads in Florida lined with 10-million dollar, beachfront houses, all of which will sooner than later be buried under 25 ft of seaweed for the next thousand years. The question is who will be left holding the bag on all that risk?
I’m certain the Republicans in the Florida legislature will let the insurance companies off of the hook before too long here, and will leave working people holding a bunch of worthless real estate, just waiting for climate catastrophe to wipe everything away.
People move to Florida for the same reason why people use to move to California. So you wonder when housing prices will absolutely soar. Also, lack of natural disaster preparedness is something that can’t be ignored in Florida. Deregulation won’t solve that problem.
But when you have banned all wokeness (whatever that is), surely all problems will be solved?
So much for DeathSantis utopia. Go back to Florida and don’t bring your Nazi politics to my state.
40% of voting Floridians voted against DeSantis, Florida is also the state with the third highest Jewish population, I’m fairly certain that nowhere near all of Florida has “Nazi” politics.
Maybe try not sounding like an ignorant by generalizing the third most populated state, which is also just as mixed as the other three most populated states. You’re just sounding like those idiots that bitch about how California is all “liberal” while ignoring the conservative North Cali and all of the Neo-Con enclaves and Nazis in between.
Sure the Florida GOP are pretty much Nazi-lite, but there’s a shitload of Florida citizens who are not them and completely disagree with them and are doing what they can to push back against them.
according to a SelfStorage
Lol, what?
It’s a storage unit company, so presumably they have their own moving service or often connect people with other moving services. They’d be able to see the trend
Yeah… that still seems like some extremely flimsy evidence to base an article on.
Edit - didn’t notice this was from Newsweek. “Journalism”
Maybe I should connect them with my local bartender. He’s full of information. Qualification? He talks to people.
They didn’t finish the sentence
…according to a SelfStorage service clerk working in Tampa /S
lol @ all the people who fled the northeast because “Florida is cheap…”
Even the second place finisher of the Carolinas has gotten too expensive.
Everywhere is expensive now. Sad reality.
Greedflation is real
My rent went up 24% this month. Now I’m paying half of my income to one corporation
More than my parents mortgage on their house
It won’t be long, and in Florida the cost for the mortgage will be neglectable in comparison to the costs of insurance.
The big downside will be that Floridians will move out of Florida and spread elsewhere. Maybe it is time for Georgia and Alabama to invest in a massive fence?
Negligible.
Build the wall
It’s Disney’s fault.
edit: honestly, do I really need to put a “/s” at the end of that?
Mate, there are a lot of people who unironically think that.
In regard to insurance premiums due to chronic weather disasters?
Oh, right.
Florida.
It’s depressing…
How?
Disney is stealing the sand from the beaches to build an ocean in Disney
/s
Poe’s Law, fam.
These hurricanes are not imaginary.
/s
Have you tried a nuclear bomb or windmills to stop them?
also /s
This isn’t just a Florida problem.
There is items that are either unique to Florida or are prevalent in Florida that make it the kind of state where this problem will happen first.
Unique to Florida is a lot of pseudo scammy ways that repairs occur after natural disasters which increase premium costs due to lawsuits causes by reconstruction occurring before appraisal.
Not unique but prevalent are the hurricanes and common flooding.
It’s happening here in southern Louisiana. My insurance premium has been steadily increasing for the last 3-5 years.
Also, we’re going through a drought which is causing a saltwater intrusion into our wetlands and wildfires in the marshes.
https://www.drought.gov/states/louisiana https://gohsep.la.gov/emergency/Saltwater https://www.wdsu.com/article/heavy-smoke-filling-the-air-in-new-orleans/45608195
Insurance typically works off historical data to evaluate risk from my understanding, and having something as disastrous as the Miami beach condo collapse bodes a bad sign for insurance companies, especially given the terrible and absolutely incompetent rescue effort during the aftermath.
By the way, I’m shocked at how quickly the Miami condo collapse left the news cycle.