Why Homeowners Insurance Rates Are Rising Fast—and What It Means for Utah
- Greg Padgett
- 4 hours ago
- 2 min read

As Utah real estate professionals, we watch the full cost of homeownership closely. Mortgage rates and prices dominate the conversation, but homeowners insurance is increasingly shaping what buyers can afford and what current owners pay each month.
According to Homes.com, monthly homeowners insurance payments have more than tripled over the past 14 years. What once felt like background noise is now a real budget factor.
The Bigger Picture
Insurance protects against major losses and is required by nearly every lender. Premiums are rising because rebuilding costs (labor and materials) have climbed sharply, home values are higher, and weather-related claims have grown in frequency and severity.
A $400,000 home that once cost roughly $3,000 a year to insure can now approach $4,000—an extra $80 per month that reduces purchasing power just like a higher interest rate.
Utah Has Seen Some of the Steepest Jumps
While Utah’s absolute premiums remain below the national average (typically $1,500–$1,900 annually for common coverage levels), the rate of increase has been among the highest in the country.
A Consumer Federation of America analysis showed national premiums rose 24% from 2021 to 2024. Utah posted one of the sharpest increases—around 59% in that period. Other data put Utah’s cumulative growth near 70–77% from 2019/2020 through 2025. Some ZIP codes and counties (including parts of Weber, Davis, and higher-elevation areas) saw jumps exceeding 40%.
What’s Driving Utah’s Costs Higher
Key factors include:
Growing wildfire exposure in the wildland-urban interface
Hail, wind, and severe storms that produce frequent claims
Higher reconstruction costs
More homes being built in higher-risk areas
Location matters. Two similar homes can carry very different premiums depending on elevation, fire protection class, roof condition, and local claims history.
Impact on Buyers and Owners
Higher insurance reduces the amount buyers can finance within a fixed monthly budget. For current homeowners, renewal increases can strain household cash flow. Shopping coverage, raising deductibles thoughtfully, and investing in risk-reduction measures still help—but they require proactive attention.
Local Expertise Helps
Insurance is highly local. That’s why we partner with Koy Jasperson of State Farm (Jasperson Insurance Agency) in Payson and Springville. As a second-generation agent with ChFC and CLU designations, Koy and his team understand Utah’s specific risks and help clients secure properly structured coverage. Reach out for a free quote and see what savings are possible
Bottom Line
Home insurance is no longer a set-it-and-forget-it expense. In Utah, rapid premium growth from a relatively affordable base means buyers and owners should treat it as a core part of the affordability conversation—alongside price, rate, and taxes.
As your local real estate agents, we’re happy to walk through the full monthly cost picture and connect you with trusted partners when needed.
