As extreme weather events multiply, home insurance providers in the US are rapidly raising rates – or quitting the business altogether – forcing many into severe financial distress.
Gretchen Bradford decided this year not to pay for home insurance.
The 59-year-old has lived her whole life in New Orleans, which sits on Louisiana’s Gulf Coast in a zone climate experts call Hurricane Alley for the devastating storms – including Hurricane Katrina in 2005 – that routinely crash against its shores.
She lives in the home her parents purchased in 1958, a prized possession which, after each hurricane, has become increasingly expensive to protect with home insurance.
In 2021, she was paying $3,035 (£2,386) annually. After her insurer stopped writing new policies in her neighbourhood, in 2022, the quote she received from the state-backed plan was more than triple that amount – $9,876 – a sum she could not afford.