Colorado Lawmakers Roll Out Bipartisan Plan Aimed At Lowering Home Insurance Risk
Homeowners' insurance rates continue to rise, prompting a bipartisan group of lawmakers to introduce a bill Wednesday aimed at reducing damage from hail and wildfire. The measure would encourage homeowners and homeowner associations to take additional mitigation steps and, in turn, could allow insurers to offer lower insurance rates once those steps are completed.
Senate Bill 49 is sponsored by Sens. Marc Snyder, D-Colorado Springs and Senate Minority Leader Lisa Frizell, R-Castle Rock. It's been assigned to the Senate Finance Committee.
Frizell told Colorado Politics that home insurance is the top concern she's hearing from her constituents, including from people who don't live in wildland-urban interface areas.
According to the state forest service, a wildland-urban interface is an area where structures and other human developments meet or intermingle with wildland vegetation. "Homes, businesses and subdivisions are being built on forested lands that have historically seen regular fires," the forest service said. About 2.5 million people live in wildland-urban interface areas, with a million living in areas with a high wildfire risk.
Those who live in wildland-urban interfaces are encouraged to mitigate risk by creating defensible spaces, managing vegetation, and using fire-resistant building materials.
Wildland-urban interface mitigation offers lessons for urban dwellers on how to reduce risk, which underpins Senate Bill 49.
Under the bill, homeowners can receive a tax deduction for contributing to a catastrophe savings account, which can cover insurance deductibles and losses from hail, wildfire, or a catastrophic wind event, uninsured losses related to those events, and property-specific mitigation actions.
In addition, homeowners and homeowners' associations will be able to tap into the state's natural disaster mitigation enterprise fund. Previously, those funds were limited to counties, municipalities, school districts, and special districts that set up mitigation efforts.
The fund, established under a 2021 state law, gets its money from a fee charged to insurance companies on the number of policies that cover property, such as fire, private crop, and certain farm and homeowner policies.
Frizell said the bill, if passed, would require homeowners to take greater responsibility for mitigating risk and ensuring their homes are as resilient to fire or hail as possible.
That could be replacing a roof with a hail-resistant roof when the old roof is ready to go, and using fire-resistant materials in the home-building process or in fencing, for example.
For homeowners' associations, Frizell noted that higher insurance costs mean higher HOA fees.
The insurance companies want this, she added. While they're not promising lower insurance costs, she said, it's been suggested. One HOA in Douglas County saw its fees triple because of HOA insurance, she added.
"If we can work as a state to acknowledge natural disasters more frequently and try to improve properties in a smart way, we can protect homes and the insurance companies," she said.
SB 49 is also backed by the Colorado Chamber of Commerce.
Chamber President and CEO Loren Furman said, "homeowners' insurance rates are becoming an increasing burden on Colorado families, driving up the cost of housing and creating workforce challenges for employers. If left unaddressed, these escalating costs will continue to strain Colorado's rising cost of living and limit future economic growth. This legislative session, the Chamber is prioritizing residential resiliency across the state to reduce homeowners' insurance rates and enhance long-term damage mitigation measures."
Out of the top 12 costliest hailstorms in Colorado, nine have taken place since 2008. That's cost Colorado homeowners, and the insurance companies that cover those homes, billions of dollars.
The most expensive hailstorm in the Denver metro area in 2017 clocked in at $3.3 billion in 2025 dollars.
Then there are wildfires, with the 2021 Marshall fire at the top of the list, which resulted in the loss of 1,084 homes, two lives, and a cost of $2 billion.
The New York Times reported last year that property insurers have lost money in eight out of the previous 11 years.
A new report says Colorado is the seventh-least stable home insurance market in the U.S. The Lending Tree report said home insurance premiums have increased more than 100% since 2020, the largest increase in the country, and insurers' loss ratio is at 81.6%, meaning insurers are close to paying more in claims than they collect in premiums.
In coastal states plagued by wildfires and hurricanes, property insurers are bolting. That hasn't been common in Colorado, although one insurer, American National, dropped its homeowners insurance products in Colorado and eight other states in 2024, citing profitability.
In Colorado, it's wildfires and hail that are the most costly to insurers.
In 2023, hoping to help homeowners in areas prone to these natural disasters, lawmakers passed the FAIR Plan, which provides property insurance coverage when traditional coverage is unavailable.
The post Colorado lawmakers roll out bipartisan plan aimed at lowering home insurance risk appeared first on Colorado Politics.
The post Colorado lawmakers roll out bipartisan plan aimed at lowering home insurance risk appeared first on Insurance News | InsuranceNewsNet.
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