Climate change is driving up the cost of house and home insurance (and it’s not subtle)
Climate change is driving up the cost of house and home insurance (and it’s not subtle) Once upon a time, “home insurance” was the boring direct debit you paid so you could sleep at night while the wind tried to rearrange your roof tiles into modern art. Now it’s becoming a live commentary on the climate: more floods, more storms, more subsidence, bigger claims, and—inevitably—bigger premiums. In the UK, insurers are already paying out eye-watering sums for weather damage. The Association of British Insurers (ABI) reports £6.1bn in property insurance payouts in 2025 , with storm and flood claims both jumping, and the average payouts rising sharply (storms and floods aren’t just more frequent; they’re more expensive when they hit). That money comes from somewhere, and a chunk of it lands back on our doormats as higher premiums and excesses. Why climate change pushes premiums up 1) More claims, more often Warmer air holds more moisture, which helps supercharge heavy rainfall...