Current:Home > NewsHurricane Helene brought major damage, spotlighting lack of flood insurance -GrowthInsight
Hurricane Helene brought major damage, spotlighting lack of flood insurance
View
Date:2025-04-18 12:04:07
Kayla Ward was drinking coffee on her porch Friday afternoon when she noticed water from the nearby Nolichucky River rising fast.
After nearly a year in the house in the Appalachian Mountains, Ward never thought to worry about flooding. But she and her husband had to race to escape after Helene swept through Jonesborough, Tennessee. The couple managed to leave with their pets and the clothes on their back, but their home was severely damaged.
Ward, like many other homeowners hit by last week's storm, did not have flood insurance, and she said her insurance company denied her husband's claim. It was a surprise to Ward, 61, who used to work as an insurance claims specialist for a full-service insurance agency in the neighboring town of Johnson City.
“We’re finding out everybody in our area is the same way. Nobody's being covered,” she told USA TODAY. And “we lost everything. Everything.”
Hurricane Helene's destructive path across the Southeast has spotlighted a lack of flood insurance in the U.S. One estimate from FEMA says just 4% of homeowners in the country have coverage.
Pay less to protect your home: Best home insurance policies
“The landscape is bleak, in terms of whether there will be insurance dollars flowing to those impacted households to fund repairs,” said Amy Bach, executive director of the consumer advocacy group United Policyholders. “Not enough (homes had flood insurance), by a long shot.”
A big insurance gap
Officials have yet to release damage estimates, but USA TODAY has reported that insured residential and commercial property damage is worth at least $3 billion in Florida and Georgia, according to financial services company CoreLogic. The storm is one of the deadliest hurricanes to make landfall on the U.S. mainland, causing more than 100 deaths, and has been described as North Carolina's "own Hurricane Katrina,” which devastated the southeastern U.S. with an estimated $125 billion in damage, not adjusted for inflation.
But Katrina's destruction was different. A number of people hit by the 2005 storm had their homeowners insurance claims approved because the destruction stemmed from wind damage, Bach said. This time, most of the damage is from storm surge and flooding.
"We don't have the wind argument, the hook, to bring in the home insurers,” she said.
Homes tend to go without flood insurance for two reasons: cost and awareness.
Some homeowners, Bach said, aren’t aware that flood insurance has to be paid separately.
“There’s definitely an information gap,” she said. “Insurance regulators and public officials are always trying to find ways to raise consumer awareness about the fact that flood damage is excluded from your home insurance, but people don’t want to think about insurance.”
Others struggle to pay for additional flood insurance, or don't think the cost is worth the coverage. Flood insurance through the National Flood Insurance Program costs roughly $1,000 a year on average, USA TODAY’s Blueprint reported. And that's on top of traditional homeowners insurance, which saw double-digit growth in 2023, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence.
Insurance prices are expected to keep rising, said Tim Zawacki, an insurance sector strategist at S&P Global. He expects homeowners insurers to reevaluate their exposures "in a wide range of locations" after Helene hit regions hundreds of miles off the coast.
"As carriers trim their exposure to limit concentration risk and earnings volatility, this will inevitably lead to higher homeowners insurance premiums," Zawacki said in an email to USA TODAY.
Insurance prices:Soaring insurance costs are making more homeowners go without it
'A false sense of security'
Some homeowners, like Ward, were under the impression additional flood insurance was unnecessary outside FEMA-designated flood zones, which require homeowners with a mortgage to purchase flood insurance.
But these flood maps are often outdated or incomplete. A 2020 report from the Association of State Floodplain Managers shows just one-third of the nation’s floodplains have been mapped out by FEMA.
“Sometimes these maps give people a false sense of security,” said Sharon Cornelissen, director of housing at the Consumer Federation of America. “As climate disasters become more common and with rain and storms becoming more frequent and more heavy, we know that the actual risk of flooding is much more widespread.”
With 99% of counties nationwide affected by flooding since 1996, FEMA considers floods the most common and costly natural disasters in the country.
“We see lack of flood insurance as the biggest insurance gap,” said Mark Friedlander, director of corporate communications at the Insurance Information Institute. “Some (homeowners) are at a higher risk than others, but you can’t say you’re not at risk, no matter where you live.”
Next steps for homeowners
For homeowners without flood insurance who were hit by Helene, experts who spoke to USA TODAY shared advice for next steps.
- Focus on getting your home dried as quickly as possible, but keep an eye out for scammers. Contractors who can help dry out homes will be in short supply, so vet any business offering to help.
- Take photos and videos to document the damage.
- Check your home policy. Bach said there may be some coverage for certain expenses under a home policy – especially if the homeowner can point to wind-driven rain as a source of damage. It's worth getting a second opinion before assuming the damage won’t be covered.
- Apply for FEMA assistance, and check for any state or local emergency funding. FEMA funding can help, but Friedlander warned that it’s not a replacement for insurance; the average FEMA disaster assistance grant award between 2016 and 2022 was $3,000. In comparison, FEMA warns that just 1 inch of water can cause roughly $25,000 in property damage.
veryGood! (28272)
Related
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- Gen Z wants an inheritance. Good luck with that, say their boomer parents
- Alix Earle apologizes again for using racial slurs directed at Black people a decade ago
- College Football Misery Index: Florida football program's problems go beyond Billy Napier
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- Are grocery stores open Labor Day 2024? Hours and details for Costco, Kroger, Publix, Aldi, more
- Look: Texas' Arch Manning throws first college football touchdown pass in blowout of CSU
- Moms for Liberty fully embraces Trump and widens role in national politics as election nears
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- Defending champion Coco Gauff loses in the U.S. Open’s fourth round to Emma Navarro
Ranking
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- 'I'll never be the person that I was': Denver police recruit recalls 'brutal hazing'
- First Labor Day parade: Union Square protest was a 'crossroads' for NYC workers
- Thousands of US hotel workers strike over Labor Day weekend
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- Horoscopes Today, August 31, 2024
- Clay Matthews jokes about why Aaron Rodgers wasn't at his Packers Hall of Fame induction
- Horoscopes Today, August 31, 2024
Recommendation
Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
California lawmakers approve legislation to ban deepfakes, protect workers and regulate AI
Linda Deutsch, AP trial writer who had front row to courtroom history, dies at 80
Johnny Gaudreau's widow posts moving tribute: 'We are going to make you proud'
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
LSU vs USC: Final score, highlights as Trojans win Week 1 thriller over Tigers
Man charged with murder in connection to elderly couple missing from nudist ranch: Police
Pregnant Cardi B and Offset Reunite to Celebrate Son Wave's 3rd Birthday Amid Divorce