
Texas Border Business
Texas Border Business
State Farm General asks the California Department of Insurance to immediately approve interim rate increases, including 22% average for homeowners.
State Farm has served the customers of California for nearly 100 years and our intention is to continue serving them for many more. State Farm helps people recover from the unexpected. That is what we are doing in the wake of the wildfires. As of February 1st, State Farm General (Fire only) has received more than 8,700 claims and has already paid more than $1 billion to customers. State Farm General will ultimately pay out significantly more, as collectively these fires will be the costliest disasters in the history of State Farm General.
The costs of the January 2025 wildfires will further deplete capital from State Farm General. Capital is necessary so an insurance company can pay for any future claims for the risks it insures. Last year, one rating agency downgraded State Farm Generalās financial strength rating due to its capital position. With further capital deterioration as a result of the wildfires, additional downgrades could follow. If that were to happen, customers with a mortgage might not be able to use State Farm General insurance on the collateral backing for their mortgage.
State Farm General asked the California Department of Insurance today to immediately approve interim rate increases to help avert a dire situation for the more than 2.8 million policies issued by State Farm General, including 1 million State Farm General homeowners customers, and the insurance market in the state of California. State Farm General has had an outstanding filed rate increase pending since June 2024.
Insurance will cost more for customers in California going forward because the risk is more significant in California. Immediate emergency interim approval of additional rate is essential to align cost and risk more closely and enable State Farm General to rebuild capital. We must appropriately match price to risk. That is foundational to how insurance works. Higher risks should pay more for insurance than lower risks. Over the last 9 years, the lack of alignment between price and risk means that for every $1.00 collected in premium, State Farm General has spent $1.26, resulting in over $5 billion in cumulative underwriting losses.
State Farm General has made difficult decisions to attempt to responsibly limit overexposure in high-risk areas while allowing for targeted growth in lower-risk regions of the state. In May 2023, State Farm General made the difficult decisionto stop writing any new policies. In a detailed letter to the CDI in March 2024, State Farm General said, āThe swift capital depletion of State Farm General is an alarm signaling the grave need for rapid and transformational action, including the critical need for rapid review and approval of currently pending and future rate filings.ā
State Farm General still insures high concentrations of risk in California that could generate financial losses multiple times larger than the companyās surplus. A smaller capital base will further constrain State Farm Generalās ability to provide coverage. Reinsurance will assist us in paying what we owe to customers.
We look forward to working alongside regulators, policymakers, and industry leaders to create a sustainable insurance environment in California that balances risk and increased rates, ensures long-term market stability, and keeps insurers like State Farm General a vital part of Californiaās future.
https://newsroom.statefarm.com/state-farm-general-insurance-company-update-on-california-2-2025