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Colorado Homeowners Insurance Costs and Hail Risk Analysis

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Published February 11th, 2026
Detected March 3rd, 2026
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Summary

Colorado's Division of Insurance released data showing hail is the primary driver of homeowners insurance cost spikes, accounting for 26-54% of premiums. Governor Polis and the DOI are seeking innovative solutions to lower these costs for homeowners and are working on legislation for roof fortification grants and wildfire reinsurance.

What changed

The Colorado Division of Insurance (DOI), in conjunction with Governor Polis, has released new data indicating that hail is the most significant factor contributing to rising homeowners insurance premiums across the state, representing an average of 26-54% of total costs depending on the county. This analysis, based on data from 20 carriers covering 80% of the market, highlights that even non-hail-prone areas are impacted by these costs. Wildfire risk, while a factor, contributes a smaller percentage to premiums (0.9-24.6%).

The findings underscore the need for immediate action to address insurance affordability. The Governor's office and the DOI are exploring legislative solutions, including a grant program for roof fortification to mitigate hail damage and a reinsurance program to address wildfire risks. These initiatives aim to lower premiums, enhance home resilience, and provide financial relief to Colorado homeowners facing escalating insurance costs.

What to do next

  1. Review the DOI's two-pager on hail and wildfire risk findings.
  2. Monitor upcoming legislative proposals related to roof fortification grants and wildfire reinsurance programs.
  3. Assess current underwriting and pricing models for potential impacts of hail and wildfire risk data.

Source document (simplified)

Governor Polis and Division of Insurance: We Must Find Innovative Solutions to Save Colorado Homeowners Money on Insurance Costs

Wednesday, February 11, 2026

Submitted by [user:fieldfirstname] Today, Governor Polis and the Colorado Division of Insurance (DOI), part of the Department of Regulatory Agencies (DORA), released new data from homeowner insurance carriers showing that in many counties hail is the largest cost driver of homeowners insurance spikes. In an effort to better understand the breakdown of homeowners insurance rates, DOI requested data from 20 homeowners insurance carriers, representing 80% of the market. This data was used to calculate average homeowners insurance premiums for 11 counties from across the state, including how much of a policyholder’s premium is attributable to hail and wildfire risks, and to understand mitigation discounts available for hail and wildfire mitigation.

“We know that homeowners insurance simply costs too much, and saving home homeowners money on insurance must be a part of the overall solution to lower the cost of housing. This data clearly outlines the problem, and now we must take innovative actions to lower insurance premiums, save people money, and increase home resilience and safety,” said Governor Polis.

The data found that hail accounts for an average 26-54% of total homeowner insurance premium, depending on the county. Even counties that don’t experience as much hail as Colorado’s Front Range and Eastern Plains are still paying a high percentage of premiums on hail. For example, in Summit County, which does not often experience hail given its mountainous terrain and lack of overall moisture, hail accounts for an average 35.6% of premiums while wildfire only accounts for 7.9%. And along the Front Range and into the Eastern Plains, hail accounts for approximately 50% of the premium homeowners pay, while wildfire has a much smaller impact.

Wildfire risk is not as significant a contributor to homeowner insurance premium, representing 0.9 - 24.6%, depending on the county. The data also shows that insurance carriers are targeting high-risk areas when pricing for wildfire risk, with low-risk counties seeing much less of their premiums going towards wildfire risk. Denver, for example, only sees an average 1% of premiums going towards wildfire risk.

“The data is clear: it is hail that is the biggest cost driver of homeowner insurance for families across the state. Even Coloradans who don’t live in hail-prone areas, such as in mountain communities, are paying for hail damage through their premiums. We can’t change the weather in Colorado, but we can and should help consumers in high risk areas fortify their roofs because that will help lower everyone's premiums. And we have to find innovative solutions to help address affordability in our high wildfire areas of the state. To that end, we’re working with the Colorado General Assembly again this year on legislation to create a grant program for fortifying roofs, as well as a reinsurance program for wildfires,” said Colorado Insurance Commissioner Michael Conway.

Read the two-pager of the findings here, including the breakdown by the 11 counties surveyed.


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Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
Various Federal Agencies
Published
February 11th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Insurers Consumers
Geographic scope
State (Colorado)

Taxonomy

Primary area
Insurance
Operational domain
Legal
Topics
Consumer Protection Property Insurance Climate Risk

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