This visualization, created using R and ggplot2, showcases the relationship between natural disasters and home insurance premiums across the U.S. The hurricane and tornado data were sourced from NOAA, while the home insurance data came from Bankrate. Although insurance premiums are influenced by many factors such as local regulations, construction costs, and individual home characteristics, and other weather events such as hail, a clear trend emerges: states with a higher frequency of destructive storms, such as Florida, tend to have significantly higher home insurance premiums. This highlights the increasing financial impact of natural disasters on homeowners.
So what’s destroying all the homes in Nebraska? Boredom?
ShitTalkingAssWipe on
40 avg hurricane spotted all the way out Midwest or is that a bad choice of color
skwyckl on
It’s insane they can even get insurance. In Italy, virtually all insurances exclude calamities related to volcanoes… for obvious reasons.
neighborofbrak on
Sorry, I call shenanigans on the home insurance rates in California. Inflated property values along with earthquakes, wildfires, and flooding being the prevalent risk factors, so much that State Farm and Allstate no longer sign policies there.
par163 on
Hail drives prices more in Oklahoma and the central us not tornadoes
LazyClerk408 on
Is flood and earthquake in there? Would g un violence be health or life insurance?
I pay $1,400/year in Wisconsin for a high level of coverage on a $650k house. 2 cars a BMW convertible and Mercedes SUV both used us $1050/year for full coverage. Kinda spoiled.
11 Comments
This visualization, created using R and ggplot2, showcases the relationship between natural disasters and home insurance premiums across the U.S. The hurricane and tornado data were sourced from NOAA, while the home insurance data came from Bankrate. Although insurance premiums are influenced by many factors such as local regulations, construction costs, and individual home characteristics, and other weather events such as hail, a clear trend emerges: states with a higher frequency of destructive storms, such as Florida, tend to have significantly higher home insurance premiums. This highlights the increasing financial impact of natural disasters on homeowners.
The code for the plot can be found here: [https://github.com/colebaril/US-Home-Insurance-Natural-Disasters](https://github.com/colebaril/US-Home-Insurance-Natural-Disasters)
So what’s destroying all the homes in Nebraska? Boredom?
40 avg hurricane spotted all the way out Midwest or is that a bad choice of color
It’s insane they can even get insurance. In Italy, virtually all insurances exclude calamities related to volcanoes… for obvious reasons.
Sorry, I call shenanigans on the home insurance rates in California. Inflated property values along with earthquakes, wildfires, and flooding being the prevalent risk factors, so much that State Farm and Allstate no longer sign policies there.
Hail drives prices more in Oklahoma and the central us not tornadoes
Is flood and earthquake in there? Would g un violence be health or life insurance?
I read hurricanes and tomatoes and it made sense
Should be number of tornados per 100 square miles or something. Dumb showing Texas as the most when it’s so much larger. https://www.weather.gov/spotterguide/tor_basics
Why is Kentucky an anomaly?
I pay $1,400/year in Wisconsin for a high level of coverage on a $650k house. 2 cars a BMW convertible and Mercedes SUV both used us $1050/year for full coverage. Kinda spoiled.