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15 Best Places to Retire in Florida Without Hurricanes

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In this article, we will take a look at the 15 best places to retire in Florida without hurricanes. If you want to skip our detailed analysis of Florida's insurance market and the best places without hurricanes, go to the 5 Best Places to Retire in Florida Without Hurricanes.

Florida’s Insurance Market

The insurance industry in Florida is on the verge of failure, with insurers losing out on their money fast. According to an Insurance Information Institute (Triple-I) analysis, the average Florida homeowners' insurance policy has witnessed a stark rise to $4,231 in 2022, up from the U.S. annual average of $1,544 in 2019. These rates are already triple the national average, and it’s unclear how things will unwind for insurance companies in the state.

The severity and rising frequency of hurricanes is one reason insurance costs are driving up fast. Hurricane Matthew (2016), Hurricane Irma (2017), Hurricane Michael (2018), and now Hurricane Ian (2022) have all been very catastrophic. The latest hurricane, Ian, landed as a powerful category 5 Atlantic hurricane. The catastrophic hurricane yielded it the title of the third-costliest weather disaster on record. It has compounded the challenges of an already struggling insurance market in Florida, with insurer losses already soaring due to litigation booms and carrier exits.

United Insurance Holdings Corp. (NASDAQ:UIHC), a property and casualty insurance holding company, reports having estimated catastrophic losses of approximately $36.4 million before income taxes during the third quarter ending September 30, 2022. The total gross loss from the company is estimated to surpass $1 billion. Heritage Insurance Holdings, Inc. (NYSE:HRTG), another property and casualty insurance holding company, has also witnessed its losses rising to $48.2 million for Q3 2022 from a net loss of $16.1 million in Q3 2021.

However, United Insurance Holdings Corp. (NASDAQ:UIHC) and Heritage Insurance Holdings, Inc. (NYSE:HRTG) have assured their financial health during such disasters. The two companies have reinsurance, or backup coverage for insurance companies, that they bought earlier to help handle the hurricane aftermath. The hurricane Ian, they say, did not cause as many claims as Hurricane Irma. United Insurance Holdings Corp. (NASDAQ:UIHC) received about 18,000 claims, while Heritage Insurance Holdings, Inc. (NYSE:HRTG) had an estimated 12,000 claims.

Meanwhile, UPC Insurance witnessed significant claims, including a $20.1 million impact on its captive reinsurer. After the company’s rating was withdrawn in August, one of its reinsurers also ended their agreement. As such, spectators agree that Florida’s insurance market will remain hard in the foreseeable future due to a difficult reinsurance market, rising litigation levels, and increased catastrophes.