Estimate your annual homeowner's insurance premium based on dwelling coverage amount, deductible, location risk, and credit tier for accurate budgeting.
Homeowner's insurance is a required component of any mortgage and a smart protection for your largest asset. Premiums depend on the dwelling coverage amount (how much it would cost to rebuild), your deductible, location-specific risk factors (hurricanes, hail, wildfires), and your credit-based insurance score.
This estimator models those variables to produce a realistic annual premium and monthly escrow amount. Knowing this figure before you buy helps you budget PITI accurately and compare the true cost of homes in different locations.
Premiums vary dramatically by geography: a $400,000 home in Texas might cost $3,500/year to insure, while the same coverage in Vermont might be $1,200. Risk level matters more than home price, which is why this calculator includes a location risk factor.
Homebuyers, investors, and real-estate professionals all benefit from precise homeowner insurance estimate figures when evaluating properties, negotiating deals, or planning long-term investment strategies. Save this calculator and revisit it whenever market conditions or your financial situation changes.
Insurance is the most variable component of PITI and the hardest to estimate without a quote. This tool gives you a ballpark figure good enough for budgeting, DTI calculations, and side-by-side property comparisons. It also illustrates the premium impact of adjusting your deductible, helping you decide between lower out-of-pocket risk and lower ongoing premiums.
Base Rate = $3.50 per $1,000 of dwelling coverage Deductible Adj = 1.0 (for $1K ded), 0.90 ($2.5K), 0.82 ($5K), 0.75 ($10K) Location Adj = 0.75 (low), 1.0 (moderate), 1.4 (high), 2.0 (very high) Credit Adj = 0.85 (excellent), 1.0 (good), 1.15 (fair), 1.35 (poor) Annual Premium = Dwelling × Base Rate / 1000 × Deductible Adj × Location Adj × Credit Adj
Result: Annual premium ≈ $1,225
Dwelling of $350K at a $3.50 base rate = $1,225 base premium. With a $1,000 deductible (1.0×), moderate location (1.0×), and good credit (1.0×), the final premium is $1,225/year or about $102/month in escrow.
The single biggest factor is location risk. Homes in hurricane, wildfire, or tornado zones can pay 2–4 times the national average. The second factor is dwelling coverage amount — more coverage means higher premiums. Deductible choice, credit score, claims history, and home features (roof age, electrical system, security) also play significant roles.
Choosing a $5,000 deductible instead of $1,000 can save 15–20% annually. On a $1,500 premium, that's $225–$300/year saved. But if you file a claim, you'll pay $4,000 more out of pocket. Statistically, homeowners file a claim every 10–15 years, so the higher deductible often saves money over time.
Insurance is one of the few areas where shopping around consistently saves money. Get quotes from at least three carriers, including both large national insurers and regional companies. Ask about discounts for new roofs, smart home devices, non-smoking households, and claims-free history. An independent agent can do the comparison shopping for you.
Standard policies (HO-3) cover the dwelling structure, personal property, liability, and additional living expenses if you're displaced by a covered event. Covered perils typically include fire, wind, hail, theft, and water damage from burst pipes. Flood and earthquake damage require separate policies.
Dwelling coverage should equal the estimated cost to rebuild your home, not the purchase price (which includes land value). Insurance agents or online tools can estimate rebuild cost based on square footage, construction type, and local labor/material costs. Under-insuring leaves you exposed to a coverage gap.
Yes. Most states allow insurers to use credit-based insurance scores. Borrowers with excellent credit typically pay 15–35% less than those with poor credit for the same coverage. Improving your credit is one of the most effective ways to lower insurance costs over time.
A higher deductible lowers your annual premium but increases your out-of-pocket cost if you file a claim. If you have an emergency fund of $5,000+, a $2,500 or $5,000 deductible may save you money long-term since most homeowners file claims infrequently.
No. Standard homeowner's insurance does not cover flood damage. If your property is in a FEMA Special Flood Hazard Area, your lender will require a separate National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) policy. Even outside flood zones, a policy may be wise if you're near water.
Homeowner's insurance rates have been rising 5–15% annually in many states, driven by increasing natural disaster frequency, higher construction costs, and growing reinsurance premiums. Budget for annual increases and shop competitive quotes every 2–3 years.