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More Than $12 Trillion in U.S. Homes Face Severe Climate Risks, New Realtor.com® Analysis Finds

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Realtor.com (NASDAQ:NWSA) released a comprehensive analysis revealing that 26% of U.S. homes, valued at $12.7 trillion, face severe or extreme climate risks. The study identified three major threats: flooding affecting $3.4 trillion in property value, hurricane winds impacting $8.0 trillion, and wildfires threatening $3.2 trillion in real estate.

The analysis highlights significant insurance challenges, with Miami homeowners paying the highest premium-to-market value ratio at 3.7%. Fourteen major metros across Louisiana, Florida, South Carolina, and Texas face 100% exposure to severe wind damage. California accounts for 40% of national wildfire risk, representing $1.8 trillion in property value.

Realtor.com (NASDAQ:NWSA) ha pubblicato un'analisi completa che rivela come il 26% delle abitazioni statunitensi, per un valore di 12,7 trilioni di dollari, sia esposto a rischi climatici gravi o estremi. Lo studio individua tre minacce principali: le inondazioni, che interessano 3,4 trilioni di dollari di valore immobiliare, i venti degli uragani, che colpiscono 8,0 trilioni di dollari, e gli incendi boschivi, che minacciano 3,2 trilioni di dollari di proprietà.

L'analisi mette in luce rilevanti criticità assicurative: i proprietari di Miami pagano il rapporto premio/valore più alto, pari al 3,7%. Quattordici grandi aree metropolitane in Louisiana, Florida, South Carolina e Texas sono esposte al 100% al rischio di danni da vento estremi. La California rappresenta il 40% del rischio nazionale da incendi boschivi, corrispondente a 1,8 trilioni di dollari di valore immobiliare.

Realtor.com (NASDAQ:NWSA) publicó un análisis exhaustivo que revela que el 26% de las viviendas de EE. UU., valoradas en 12,7 billones de dólares, enfrentan riesgos climáticos severos o extremos. El estudio identifica tres amenazas principales: inundaciones que afectan 3,4 billones de dólares en valor inmobiliario, vientos de huracán que impactan 8,0 billones de dólares y incendios forestales que amenazan 3,2 billones de dólares en bienes raíces.

El informe subraya importantes desafíos en seguros: los propietarios de Miami pagan la mayor relación prima/valor de mercado, con un 3,7%. Catorce grandes áreas metropolitanas en Luisiana, Florida, Carolina del Sur y Texas enfrentan una exposición del 100% al daño por vientos severos. California concentra el 40% del riesgo nacional de incendios forestales, equivalente a 1,8 billones de dólares en valor inmobiliario.

Realtor.com (NASDAQ:NWSA)는 미국 주택의 26%, 총 12.7조 달러 규모가 심각하거나 극심한 기후 위험에 노출되어 있다는 종합 분석을 발표했습니다. 연구는 세 가지 주요 위협을 지목했습니다: 홍수로 인한 3.4조 달러의 자산 위험, 허리케인 강풍으로 인한 8.0조 달러의 피해 위험, 산불로 인한 3.2조 달러의 부동산 위험입니다.

분석은 보험 측면의 중대한 문제들도 강조했습니다. 마이애미 주택 소유주는 시장 가치 대비 보험료 비율이 가장 높아 3.7%를 부담합니다. 루이지애나, 플로리다, 사우스캐롤라이나, 텍사스의 14개 주요 대도시권은 강풍 피해에 대해 100% 노출되어 있습니다. 캘리포니아는 전국 산불 위험의 40%를 차지하며, 이는 1.8조 달러의 부동산 가치에 해당합니다.

Realtor.com (NASDAQ:NWSA) a publié une analyse complète révélant que 26 % des logements américains, pour une valeur de 12,7 000 milliards de dollars, sont exposés à des risques climatiques sévères ou extrêmes. L'étude identifie trois menaces majeures : les inondations affectant 3,4 000 milliards de dollars de valeur immobilière, les vents d'ouragan impactant 8,0 000 milliards de dollars, et les feux de forêt menaçant 3,2 000 milliards de dollars de biens immobiliers.

L'analyse souligne d'importants défis en matière d'assurance : les propriétaires de Miami paient le ratio prime/valeur de marché le plus élevé, à 3,7 %. Quatorze grandes métropoles en Louisiane, Floride, Caroline du Sud et Texas sont exposées à 100 % aux dommages causés par des vents violents. La Californie représente 40 % du risque national d'incendies de forêt, soit 1,8 000 milliards de dollars de valeur immobilière.

Realtor.com (NASDAQ:NWSA) veröffentlichte eine umfassende Analyse, die zeigt, dass 26 % der US-Wohnungen im Wert von 12,7 Billionen Dollar schweren oder extremen Klimarisiken ausgesetzt sind. Die Studie benennt drei Hauptbedrohungen: Überschwemmungen betreffen 3,4 Billionen Dollar an Immobilienwerten, Hurrikanwinde wirken sich auf 8,0 Billionen Dollar aus, und Waldbrände bedrohen 3,2 Billionen Dollar an Immobilien.

Die Analyse hebt bedeutende Versicherungsprobleme hervor: Hausbesitzer in Miami zahlen das höchste Prämien-zu-Marktwert-Verhältnis von 3,7%. Vierzehn große Metropolregionen in Louisiana, Florida, South Carolina und Texas sind zu 100% dem Risiko schwerer Windschäden ausgesetzt. Kalifornien macht 40% des nationalen Waldbrandrisikos aus und entspricht 1,8 Billionen Dollar an Immobilienwert.

Positive
  • Comprehensive climate risk data now available on Realtor.com platform to help homebuyers make informed decisions
  • Detailed market-specific analysis covering the top 100 U.S. metros
  • Transparent insurance cost data provided for major markets
Negative
  • 26% of U.S. homes ($12.7 trillion in value) face severe climate risks
  • Insurance costs reaching extreme levels in high-risk areas (up to 3.7% of home value annually)
  • Significant gap between FEMA flood maps and actual flood risks
  • California's insurance market under severe stress with FAIR Plan exposure up 289% since 2021

26% of U.S. homes are vulnerable to flooding, wildfire, or hurricane wind damage resulting in higher insurance premiums

AUSTIN, Texas, Sept. 3, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- More than one in four homes in the U.S.—representing $12.7 trillion in real estate value—are exposed to severe or extreme climate risks, according to a Realtor.com® report released today. The report highlights how flood, hurricane wind, and wildfire threats are reshaping housing markets, homeowner costs, and insurance availability nationwide.

"Climate risks are no longer a distant threat for U.S. housing—they are a present reality that put a large chunk of U.S. real estate value at risk," said Danielle Hale, Chief Economist at Realtor.com®. "In many markets, the gap between perceived risk and actual risk is sizable, particularly for flooding. This has significant consequences for homeowners, buyers, and insurers, and it underscores the need for readily available data to help households make informed decisions."

Flood Risk: Underestimated and Growing
Flood risk is one of the most underestimated hazards in the housing market. Nearly 6 million homes, valued at $3.4 trillion, are likely to experience severe or extreme flooding over the next 30 years, according to First Street's Flood Factor score data found on Realtor.com®. This figure is about 2 million higher than the number of homes located in FEMA's Special Flood Hazard Areas (SFHAs), largely because FEMA's maps do not fully reflect heavy rainfall or the effects of climate change.

Within the 100 largest metros, New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco are the top metros where we see the biggest gap in dollar terms, between homes in FEMA SFHAs and homes facing severe or extreme flood risk, by $95.3 billion (New York), $65.6 billion (Los Angeles) and $54.9 billion (San Francisco). By gap in share of market value, New Orleans leads the nation with 66 percentage points of its housing stock at severe or extreme flood risk but not identified by FEMA SFHAs, followed by Palm Bay, Florida, at 15 percentage points and Chattanooga, Tennessee, at 11 percentage points.

Coastal markets dominate the list of metro areas with the greatest dollar value and share of dollar value exposed to severe or extreme flood risk.

Table 1 A: Metro Ranked by Total Value of Homes With Severe or Extreme Flood Risk (Flood Factor Score>=7) 

Rank

Metros

Total Value

Share of Value

1

Miami-Fort Lauderdale-West Palm Beach, FL

$306.8B

23.2 %

2

New York-Newark-Jersey City, NY-NJ

$295.3B

9.9 %

3

Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL

$117.7B

25.6 %

4

Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim, CA

$99.6B

3.2 %

5

Houston-Pasadena-The Woodlands, TX

$92.4B

12.1 %

Table 1 B: Metro Ranked by Share of Value of Homes With Severe or Extreme Flood Risk (Flood Factor Score>=7)

Rank

Metros

Share of Value

Total Value

1

New Orleans-Metairie, LA

88.9 %

$72.1B

2

Cape Coral-Fort Myers, FL

46.1 %

$77.5B

3

Charleston-North Charleston, SC

34.7 %

$59.8B

4

North Port-Bradenton-Sarasota, FL

29.3 %

$59.7B

5

Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL

25.6 %

$117.7B

Hurricane Wind Risk: Entire Markets at Stake
In 2025, approximately 18.3% of homes in the United States, valued at nearly $8.0 trillion, face severe or extreme risk of wind damage, according to First Street's Wind Factor score data available on Realtor.com. In fourteen major metros across Louisiana, Florida, South Carolina, and Texas—including Miami, Houston, Tampa, and New Orleans—every home is exposed to severe or extreme risk of wind damage. Because these risks frequently overlap with flood exposure, homeowners in coastal markets face compounded threats. Financially, the burden is amplified by high hurricane deductibles; in many states, homeowners with a $400,000 policy may need to cover as much as $20,000 in damage before insurance kicks in.

Table 2 A: Metro Ranked by Total Value at Severe or Extreme Wind Risk (Wind Factor Score>=7)  

Rank

Metros

Total Value

Share of Value

1

Miami-Fort Lauderdale-West Palm Beach, FL

$1,323.9B

100.0 %

2

Houston-Pasadena-The Woodlands, TX

$764.3B

100.0 %

3

New York-Newark-Jersey City, NY-NJ

$545.6B

18.3 %

4

Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL

$459.7B

100.0 %

5

Orlando-Kissimmee-Sanford, FL

$372.2B

100.0 %

Table 2 B: Metros where All Homes Face Severe or Extreme Wind Risk (Wind Factor Score >=7) 

Rank

Metros

Share of Value

Total Value

1

Baton Rouge, LA

100.0 %

$70.1B

2

Cape Coral-Fort Myers, FL

100.0 %

$168.0B

3

Charleston-North Charleston, SC

100.0 %

$172.6B

4

Deltona-Daytona Beach-Ormond Beach, FL

100.0 %

$103.1B

5

Houston-Pasadena-The Woodlands, TX

100.0 %

$764.3B

6

Jacksonville, FL

100.0 %

$240.1B

7

Lakeland-Winter Haven, FL

100.0 %

$73.9B

8

McAllen-Edinburg-Mission, TX

100.0 %

$41.3B

9

Miami-Fort Lauderdale-West Palm Beach, FL

100.0 %

$1,323.9B

10

New Orleans-Metairie, LA

100.0 %

$81.0B

11

North Port-Bradenton-Sarasota, FL

100.0 %

$203.0B

12

Orlando-Kissimmee-Sanford, FL

100.0 %

$372.2B

13

Palm Bay-Melbourne-Titusville, FL

100.0 %

$98.2B

14

Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL

100.0 %

$459.7B

Wildfire Risk: Concentrated but Intensifying
Wildfire exposure, while geographically concentrated, represents a significant and growing challenge. In 2025, 5.6 percent of homes, worth $3.2 trillion, face severe or extreme wildfire risk, according to First Street Fire Factor score data available on Realtor.com. California alone accounts for nearly 40 percent of this total, or $1.8 trillion in property value, with Los Angeles and Riverside among the most exposed metros. The state's insurance market is under severe stress: California's FAIR Plan, designed as a last-resort option, has grown to $650 billion in total exposure, up 289 percent since 2021.

Outside California, wildfire risk is also acute in western metros such as Colorado Springs, where more than three-quarters of home value is vulnerable, and Tucson, where 60 percent of housing stock faces high fire danger.

Insurance Costs: Rising and Uneven
Rising insurance costs are amplifying the financial strain on homeowners in these high-risk areas. In Miami, for single-family homeowners under a HO-3 policy, the most common type of homeowners insurance policy in the U.S., the typical homeowner now pays annual premiums equal to 3.7 percent of the home's market value—the highest ratio among the nation's 100 largest metros.

New Orleans follows closely at 3.6 percent, with Cape Coral, Florida, at 2.2 percent. Florida cities dominate the list of expensive insurance markets, with Tampa, Palm Bay, and North Port all ranking among the top ten. These burdens come on top of structural gaps in coverage: flood insurance is typically sold separately, hurricane deductibles are significantly higher than standard policies, and wildfire coverage in many regions is either limited or unaffordable

"Climate risk and insurance are not usually a top consideration for home shoppers balancing budgets against still-high home prices and mortgage rates, but these factors already shape ongoing housing costs and affordability, and increasingly whether they can secure affordable insurance coverage," said Hale. "While the types of risk vary by region—flooding in the Northeast, wildfires in the West, and hurricanes in the South—the financial consequences are increasingly national in scope."

Table 3: Markets with the Highest Insurance Burden

Rank

Market

Median
Premium-to
-Market
Value Ratio

Median Market
Value of Homes

Estimated
Insurance
Premium for a
Typical Home

1

Miami-Fort Lauderdale-West Palm Beach, FL

3.7 %

$614,000

$22,718

2

New Orleans-Metairie, LA

3.6 %

$231,328

$8,328

3

Cape Coral-Fort Myers, FL

2.2 %

$393,147

$8,649

4

Oklahoma City, OK

2.0 %

$236,889

$4,738

5

Baton Rouge, LA

2.0 %

$233,600

$4,672

6

Palm Bay-Melbourne-Titusville, FL

1.7 %

$363,076

$6,172

7

North Port-Bradenton-Sarasota, FL

1.7 %

$450,401

$7,657

8

Tulsa, OK

1.7 %

$230,530

$3,919

9

Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL

1.7 %

$390,900

$6,645

10

Houston-Pasadena-The Woodlands, TX

1.5 %

$317,000

$4,755


Top 100 Average

0.8 %

$435,633

$3,485

Note: Realtor.com leveraged rate data from Insurify, a digital insurance agency and

comparison platform, to calculate the home insurance prices used in this report.

Rates in this table represent the median annual cost of a HO-3 insurance policy for

homeowners with good credit and zero claims within the past five years, covering a single-

family frame house with the following coverage limits: variable dwelling coverage appropriate

for the home value,  personal property coverage at 75% of dwelling coverage limit, $300,000

liability, a $1,000 deductible general deductible and a 2% hail deductible,  a 5%

wind/hurricane deductible.

 

Methodology
Realtor.com leveraged insurance data from Insurify, a digital insurance agency and comparison platform, to calculate home insurance rates used in this report.

The analysis is based on the median annual cost of a HO-3 insurance policy for homeowners with good credit and no claims in the past five years. Policy assumptions include coverage for a single-family frame home with variable dwelling coverage appropriate for the home value, personal property coverage at 75% of dwelling coverage limit, $300,000 liability, a $1,000 general deductible and a 2% hail deductible, a 5% wind/hurricane deductible.

Since the insurance rates were originally provided at the county level, we applied property-level insurance modifiers from Insurify to detailed property features on Realtor.com to generate more accurate premium estimates for individual properties. Additionally, each property was matched with the most recent Automated Valuation Model (AVM) estimates provided by Realtor.com® data providers to determine market values, which were then used to calculate the insurance premium-to-market-value ratio and aggregate metro-level median ratios.

Severe and extreme risk refers to homes with a fire, flood and wind Factor Score of 7 or higher from First Street. Each Factor Score boundaries were overlaid on top of Realtor.com® single family, condo, townhome, rowhome and co-op property data to assign a score to each home which was matched to the most recent Automated Valuation Model (AVM) estimates from Realtor.com® data providers to derive values. Urban Honolulu, HI is not included in the top 100 metro rankings due to lack of data available for some risk types.

About Realtor.com®
Realtor.com® pioneered online real estate and has been at the forefront for over 25 years, connecting buyers, sellers, and renters with trusted insights, professional guidance and powerful tools to help them find their perfect home. Recognized as the No. 1 site trusted by real estate professionals, Realtor.com® is a valued partner, delivering consumer connections and a robust suite of marketing tools to support business growth. Realtor.com® is operated by News Corp [Nasdaq: NWS, NWSA] [ASX: NWS, NWSLV] subsidiary Move, Inc.

Media contact: Mallory Micetich, press@realtor.com

Cision View original content:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/more-than-12-trillion-in-us-homes-face-severe-climate-risks-new-realtorcom-analysis-finds-302544458.html

SOURCE Realtor.com

FAQ

What percentage of U.S. homes are at risk from severe climate threats in 2025?

According to Realtor.com's analysis, 26% of U.S. homes, representing $12.7 trillion in real estate value, are exposed to severe or extreme climate risks from flooding, hurricane winds, or wildfires.

Which U.S. cities have the highest insurance costs relative to home values in 2025?

Miami leads with 3.7% premium-to-market value ratio, followed by New Orleans at 3.6% and Cape Coral, Florida at 2.2%. Florida cities dominate the top 10 list for highest insurance burdens.

How many U.S. homes are at risk of severe flooding according to Realtor.com's 2025 analysis?

Nearly 6 million homes, valued at $3.4 trillion, are likely to experience severe or extreme flooding over the next 30 years, which is 2 million more homes than identified in FEMA's Special Flood Hazard Areas.

What is the total value of U.S. homes facing severe wildfire risk in 2025?

5.6% of U.S. homes, worth $3.2 trillion, face severe or extreme wildfire risk, with California accounting for $1.8 trillion (40%) of this total value.

How many major metros have 100% exposure to severe hurricane wind risk?

Fourteen major metros across Louisiana, Florida, South Carolina, and Texas have 100% of homes exposed to severe or extreme risk of wind damage, including major cities like Miami, Houston, Tampa, and New Orleans.
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