| State Farm Gets 'Provisional' Approval For 22% Rate Hike In California 
 by Tyler Durden
 
 Monday, Mar 17, 2025 - 04:10 PM
 
 While Gavin Newsom gallavants around the  pod-o-sphere trying to reinvent himself as a moderate Democrat, residents of his woefully mismanaged state have 'enjoyed' watching their home insurance rates skyrocket, or have it dropped altogether - as companies are abandoning the state left and right over financial struggles stemming from wildfires and other peril.
 
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 To  that end, California Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara announced on  Friday that he has "provisionally" allowed State Farm to hike rates by  22%,  CBS News reports.
 
 
 Lara described the not-yet-final emergency rate increase as a necessary measure given "unprecedented times" in a statement, saying the insurance company will have to justify the rate hike with  data proving it's needed at a public hearing on April 8. During a Feb.  26 meeting at the Department of Insurance's Oakland office, State Farm  told the commissioner it would be able to cover thousands of claims from  the deadly wildfires in January which damaged and destroyed thousands  of homes and other structures — but would need to raise homeowners' rates to cover the costs. By Feb. 1, State Farm received over 8,700 claims related to the LA wildfires totaling over $1 billion, resulting  in State Farm General - the company's California-only subsidiary, to  warn that rate hikes are needed to pay out future claims, as it expects  to cover an estimated $7.6 billion from the LA wildfire  losses alone. The company added that payout out the claims has already  depleted its capital - requiring them to raise rates by 22% for homeowners and 15% for renters.
 
 
 State  Farm, one of California's largest home insurers, covers more than 1  million state homeowners. In a Friday statement, they called the  provisional rate increase a "step in the right direction" as they work  to rebuild capital.
 
 "It's time for certainty in the California insurance market for our customers,"  reads the statement. "The provisional nature of today's decision does  not improve that certainty but it's a step in the right direction. We  are moving forward with implementing this provisionally approved rate  and will continue to work with the California Department of Insurance  for a sustainable future for the California insurance market."
 
 
 Some  Los Angeles County residents who lost homes in the Palisades and Eaton  Fires have reported not having enough coverage to cover the destruction  and rebuild while others had their coverage dropped before the  disasters. In the Pacific Palisades, 1,600 policies were dropped by  State Farm in July, and an analysis by CBS News San Francisco last year  found that State Farm also dropped more than 2,000 policies in other  parts of LA including another neighborhood threatened by the Palisades  Fire. -CBS NewsThe move reflects an overall trend of private insurers, including State Farm, Allstate, and Farmers Insurance, dropping policies in the state or  halting underwriting - causing California homeowners to forego  insurance, or use the state-backed insurer of last resort: the  California Fair Access to Insurance Requirements Plan (FAIR), which  offers free basic insurance to cover homes in high-risk areas where  private insurers won't provide coverage (or will provide a 'wrap' policy  on top of the FAIR plan).
 
 
 "Many are already anxious about losing their coverage and being forced onto the Fair Plan,"  Lara said at a meeting with State Farm last month, adding "And in terms  of what certainty can consumers expect from State Farm if granted an  interim rate, I do appreciate State Farm was the first insurer to  voluntarily suspend pending non-renewals and cancellations in areas  affected by the Palisades and Eaton fires."
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