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State Farm pleads for emergency rate hikes on California homeowners


A State Farm logo is seen in front of a State Farm insurance office on February 03, 2025 in Larkspur, California. 

Justin Sullivan | Getty Images News | Getty Images

State Farm is making its case this week for a major rate hike for California homeowners in a hearing that could prove crucial to the insurer’s future.

The state’s largest property insurer needs approval to raise its rates on customers, and it’s applied for an emergency rate increase. The company argues it needs the additional funds to boost capital and avert an increasingly dire financial situation following the devastating Los Angeles wildfires.

State Farm General, which is the California arm of the national parent company, is presenting its case for the rate increases in front of an administrative judge in Oakland after the state insurance commissioner, Ricardo Lara, gave the insurer provisional approval for its emergency request.

The three-day hearing is scheduled to wrap up Thursday.

The situation for State Farm is precarious. An attorney for the California Department of Insurance compared it to the Titanic, saying the iceberg is in sight but there’s still time to turn the proverbial ship around.

“If we don’t, 3 million Californians are going into the water and there are not enough lifeboats,” that attorney, Nikki McKennedy, warned.

Measuring damage from California wildfires: Here's what to know

The historic wildfires that ripped through Los Angeles in January caused an estimated $250 billion to $275 billion in total damages and broader economic slowdown, according to AccuWeather, making it the costliest natural disaster on record.

State Farm General has about 20% of California’s homeowners market with nearly 3 million policies. The insurer has so far paid out over $2.75 billion on approximately 12,390 claims filed as a result of the L.A. wildfires and estimates direct losses tied to the fires to be approximately $7.6 billion, although reinsurance will lower its losses to around $612 million.

In February, the insurer requested that insurance regulators approve rate hikes on homeowners of 22%. It has since lowered its request to a 17% increase. State Farm is petitioning for an increase of 38% on renter dwelling policies, which is coverage for landlords, and 15% raise for renters.

Attorneys for State Farm General said on Tuesday that it has also agreed to seek $400 million in funds from its parent company if the rate increases are approved.

In February, S&P Global placed State Farm’s California subsidiary and its AA credit rating on a “CreditWatch Negative,” citing 5 years of weak underwriting performance and deteriorating capital capital scenarios.

Even before the devastating L.A. wildfires, insurers were facing big losses in the state due to the uptick in frequency and size of natural disasters over the past decade. Insurance Commissioner Lara, who is elected, not appointed, has been loath to approve significant rate hikes for both homeowners and auto insurance.

Meanwhile carriers pay out more in claims and expenses in the state than they collect in…



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