Quandri P&C Index: U.S. Home Insurance Premium Increases Are Easing, With Renewal Hikes Roughly Halved Over the Past Year
VANCOUVER, June 17, 2026 — Quandri, the AI platform for insurance agencies and brokerages, today released the inaugural Quandri Index, a new real-time read on U.S. P&C insurance pricing drawn from actual renewal activity across the country. The first edition finds that the steep price increases in home insurance of recent years are finally cooling.
The median home insurance premium increase fell from roughly 13% to roughly 6% across more than 125,000 paired renewals at nearly 50 U.S. brokerages; a near-halving of the pace over nine months. The decline was steady, with a notable step-down at the start of 2026.
The relief for homeowners is real, but partial. About three in four policyholders still saw their premiums rise this spring. The bigger shift is in severity: the share of renewals with an increase of 20% or more has roughly halved, from about one in three to one in six.
Notably, even as pricing pressure eased, insurers continued to raise dwelling coverage on roughly nine in ten renewals, a standard practice to keep rebuild limits in step with construction costs. Those adjustments also shrank over the same period, from about 7% to under 4%; a further sign that the cost pressures driving the hard market are receding.
The easing was widespread but uneven. States such as California and Colorado remained among the firmest markets, with median renewal increases holding in the mid-teens for much of the year, while much of the Pacific Northwest saw increases in the low single digits.
“For three years, the defining story for American homeowners was renewals that kept coming in higher than the year before, often by double digits,” said Jackson Fregeau, Co-Founder and CEO of Quandri. “The data shows that is finally changing. But most households are still paying more than they were a year ago, and the picture varies from state to state. Agents who are unable to review and proactively service every renewal will still have clients who shop around, and retention is still at risk.”
Quandri sees renewal premiums the moment carriers issue them, typically weeks before a policy takes effect. That timing gives the Quandri Index an early read on pricing trends, well ahead of official inflation data.
Key findings for homeowner renewals, Aug. 2025 to May 2026:
- Median renewal increase fell from ~13% (summer 2025) to ~6% (spring 2026).
- The share of renewals with a 20%+ increase fell from ~1 in 3 to ~1 in 6.
- About three-quarters of homeowners still saw an increase at their most recent renewal.
- Insurers raised dwelling coverage on ~9 in 10 renewals; the size of those increases roughly halved over the year.
- California and Colorado stayed among the firmest markets; the Pacific Northwest among the softest.
About the Quandri Index
The Quandri Index is a measure of U.S. P&C insurance pricing, based on real renewal activity across Quandri's network of agencies and brokerages throughout North America. This inaugural edition covers home insurance.
Methodology
The Index compares the renewal-term premium to the prior-term premium for the same policy with the same carrier, across more than 125,000 paired home insurance renewals at nearly 50 U.S. brokerages using Quandri between August 2025 and May 2026. Premium changes beyond ±100% are excluded and the median is reported to limit the influence of outliers. State is derived from policy coverage records.
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