Business & Tech

Home, Auto Insurance Rates Skyrocket In MA: See What Is Being Done

The financial burden of home and auto insurance premiums has ignited public outcry.

MASSACHUSETTS — Both home and auto insurance rates have soared since 2020, with increases averaging 25-50 percent and 30-40 percent, respectively, in Massachusetts, according to an analysis by The Wall Street Journal.

Homeowners insurance rates have climbed by an average of 50 percent nationwide, while auto insurance rates have seen a 42 percent increase. These rate increases significantly surpass the 26 percent increase in consumer prices through August, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence and Labor Department data.

The mounting financial burden of escalating home and auto insurance premiums has ignited public outcry, pushing lawmakers in states across the political spectrum to confront the issue head-on. Both Democrat- and Republican-led states are under pressure to enact legislation that would impose caps on these rates, reflecting a bipartisan concern over the affordability and accessibility of essential insurance coverage.

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“Rate increases are top of mind for every policymaker across the country. Consumers are going to them and saying, ‘I can’t deal with a 30% rate increase, or a 40% rate increase’,” Jon Godfread, president of the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, told The Journal.

Related: 5 MA Zip Codes Among Priciest In U.S., New Analysis Shows

Find out what's happening in Across Massachusettsfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

With the lone exception of Wyoming, states are required to file notice of rate increases, according to the National Association of Insurance Commissioners. Lawmakers can reject increases in New Jersey, Pennsylvania and nine other states.

In July, Gov. Maura Healey announced that the Division of Health negotiated down proposed rate increases from six health insurers, including Fallon Community Health Plan, Health New England, Harvard Pilgrim Health Care, Mass General Brigham Health Plan, Tufts Health Public Plans and United Healthcare.

The Commissioner also struck down rate increases for two health plans, including Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts HMO Blue, Inc. and WellSense Health Plan, for being excessive.

Other states are at the mercy of insurers. The U.S. insurance market, founded in 1752, was developed and is regulated at the state level. State insurance commissioners were appointed in the 1850s. In the 1940s, Congress exempted insurance from federal antitrust laws, allowing states to legislate on prices.

Pending legislation in Illinois seeks regulatory changes that would give the state’s insurance commission veto power over increases it deems excessive. New York lawmakers are looking at soaring home insurance costs, and Democratic lawmakers in Michigan this summer proposed a law that would cut auto insurance rates by 10 percent.

Insurers contend that while price caps may offer short-term appeal, they ultimately lead to long-term harm.

“Price controls don’t lead to affordability,” Tim Zawacki, an analyst at S&P Global, told The Journal. “Ultimately, they just chase insurers out of the market.”

Regulators in California recently greenlighted double-digit home insurance rate increases after big insurance companies like State Farm threatened to pull out of the market. For decades, the state had a 6.9 percent ceiling on homeowner premium prices, resulting in rates below the national average despite expensive real estate and vulnerability to wildfires.

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