Progressive stop coverage in Texas

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SlugSlinger

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Oklahoma may be next.


Concerns after Progressive becomes latest insurance company to limit coverage in Texas​

The Texas Department of Insurance says four companies have left Texas so far this year, impacting 11,000 homeowners across the state.​

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AUSTIN, Texas — Progressive is the latest insurance company to stop offering homeowner coverage in parts of Texas due to the rise in weather-related disasters.
According to Texas insurance commissioner Cassie Brown, four other companies have ‘exited the Texas market’ this year regarding property and casualty insurance.
Brown, who testified at the Texas Capitol on Tuesday, says those exits impact 11,000 Texas homeowners.
“Several companies are making some decisions to not grow as fast in Texas as they have been in the past,” Brown said. “It could be that they are either increasing their deductibles. They may say this is a particular area of the state where we've seen a lot of losses. So we're not gonna grow as fast.”
According to Progressive's second quarterly reports, the insurance company claims 40% of their recent storm losses were in Texas.
“In 2023, there were $28 billion weather-related claims. So, the carriers just can't provide the capacity that they need to write everywhere,” said risk consultant Frank Barbella.
According to Barbella, insurance companies leaving Texas dramatically affects clients and other providers since it limits coverage and increases pricing capacities. Barbella said 100% of his clients have been affected and are seeing increases in their insurance renewals that are up to five times what they’re currently paying in just a year.
“It definitely concerns me," Barbella said. "An example would be ... Someone that we insured with a carrier that was paying around $2000, and the renewal from that same carrier with no claims went to $10,000 in one year."
Barbella said all of his clients are feeling the strain, seeing rate increases no less than 20% year after year.
Round Rock resident DeAnn Fraser said she felt that strain after a storm hit her home in 2022.
“Ended up being almost half a million dollars,” Fraser said. “So, it was a big claim.”
Fraser said they used the money to fix their home and put it on the market to sell. She said days before they closed on a deal, their provider denied their request to renew their homeowner's policy.
“Was I supposed to go outside and go, ‘Oh, tornado, could you miss my house and go to the left? Please, because otherwise my insurance is gonna drop me,'" Fraser said.

Fraser said she scrambled to get a new policy and paid double for it. She said seeing insurance companies leave Texas worries her.
“It’s gonna leave people uninsured or underinsured because they're gonna cut back on full coverage that they really need just to make it affordable, so they have something,” Fraser said.
Barbella said insurance follows the trend of inflation and believes insurance companies will eventually return to Texas.
“They're gonna look at their analytics and, if it makes sense for them to enter the state, they will from a profitability standpoint,” Barbella said.
Barbella predicts it may take up to two years for carriers to think Texas is a viable place to return to. Meanwhile, the Texas Department of Insurance said eight companies have been approved to enter the market already this year.

 

retrieverman

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When I sold insurance in the late 90’s, Progressive was for high risk drivers, and they paid high prices. My agent switched my auto coverage from Liberty Mutual to Progressive last and saved me about $3k a year.
 

dlbleak

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The company is trying really hard to hide information. After the news of their entanglement with the left in 2016, google has helped them hide stuff. I’ve screenshotted a couple things. These may be out of order but you’ll get the jist.
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dlbleak

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I guess you can say I’m sticking my head in the sand over stuff like that, because I’m fairly sure if I dug into every company I do business with or buy their products I’d find a similar history on many of them.
I hear you, it’s hard to find those companies to do business with that can compete on pricing. Wonder why that is? Things that make you say, Hmmmm.
I’m not calling for a boycott or anything, don’t believe in those. BUT, they do call themselves Progressive for a reason.
 

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