Compare Home Insurance Quotes

Compare home insurance quotes in minutes to protect your home fully while saving hundreds on premiums you’re likely overpaying right now.

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Cheapest recent home insurance quotes

Homeowners have found policies from USAA, State Farm, Nationwide, Travelers, Allstate, Liberty Mutual, and more, through fast side-by-side comparisons in the last few days.

Updated at

Quickfacts

  • Real bindable rates from top US carriers – enter LA ZIP, roof age, sq ft; no spam/forms.

  • Up to 30% off via mitigation credits (defensible space, ember vents), bundling auto/home – beat $137/mo avg.

  • See dwelling $300k, liability $100k, deductibles, add-ons (water backup $5-25k); excl. flood/quake (NFIP sep).

  • Monitored alarms, new roof Class 4, claim-free: Toggle live for $149/mo lows (USAA-like, Forbes 2026).

Buying homeowners insurance shouldn’t be guesswork. On this page, you’ll compare real, bindable quotes from top U.S. insurers and learn how coverage, deductibles, and home details (like roof age, security devices, and recent updates) affect price.

We’ll walk you through what a standard HO‑3 policy includes, what it excludes (flood and earthquake are separate), and the smart add‑ons—like water backup and code‑upgrade—that many homeowners choose.

What you’ll learn on this page

  • Compare home insurance quotes side by side—coverages, limits, deductibles, endorsements.

  • See what drives your rate (home, location, claims) and save with discounts/bundles.

How Home Insurance Quotes Work (U.S. Guide)

Homeowners insurance quotes estimate what you’ll pay to insure your property based on your home’s rebuild cost, your location’s risks, and choices you make about limits, deductibles, and add‑ons.

The quote isn’t just a price it’s a package of coverages and terms you can adjust to fit your needs and budget.

When you compare home insurance quotes, carriers look at:

Home details

Year built, size (sq ft), construction, roof type/age, recent updates, and safety devices (alarm, leak sensors).

Location & hazards

Distance to hydrant/fire station, wildfire/wind/hail risk, and flood risk (flood insurance is separate).

Coverage choices

Dwelling (replacement cost), personal property, liability, and deductibles (all-perils vs. named-storm/wind-hail in some states).

Your history

Prior claims and credit (only where state law allows).

Optional add-ons

Water backup, ordinance or law (code upgrade), service line, equipment breakdown, and scheduled valuables.

Note: Standard homeowners policies don’t include flood or earthquake; separate policies are available. Named‑storm or wind‑hail deductibles may apply in certain states.

What to Compare Side‑by‑Side in Quotes

Not all “cheapest” quotes protect you the same way. Use this checklist to compare the parts that change coverage so price differences actually make sense.

Pro tip: When comparing, keep limits/deductibles the same across carriers first. Then toggle endorsements to see the true price‑for‑coverage differences.

How to Get an Accurate Quote (What to Fill In)

Use this checklist to make sure your prices are precise and comparable across carriers.

FieldWhy It MattersPro Tip
Property address and ZIPSets location factors and catastrophe risk (wildfire, wind-hail, flood)Enter the full street address, not just ZIP, for precise pricing
Year built and living area (sq. ft.)Drives rebuild (replacement-cost) calculationsMatch tax records or appraisal; note additions/finished basements
Roof material and ageMajor driver of price and roof settlement terms (RCV vs ACV)If replaced, list month/year and upload invoice/photos
Updates (roof/electrical/plumbing/HVAC) and yearNewer systems lower risk and can reduce priceKeep permit dates or contractor receipts handy
Construction and foundationAffects rebuild cost and hazard resilienceNote frame vs masonry; slab, crawlspace, or basement
Distance to fire hydrant/stationImpacts fire protection ratingUse best estimate (e.g., “under 1,000 ft hydrant; 2.5 mi station”)
Safety devicesDiscounts for monitored alarm, smoke/CO, water leak shutoffHave monitoring certificate or account number ready
Occupancy and useRating differs for primary, secondary, or tenant-occupiedShort-term rental may need a different policy form
Prior claims (last 5 years)Insurers weigh frequency/severityList dates, type, amount paid (if any), and status
Pets, pool, trampoline, wood stoveChanges liability profile and eligibilityDisclose fully; fences/alarms help risk profile
Liability limit requestedProtects your assets against lawsuitsMany households choose $300k–$500k; consider umbrella
DeductiblesOut-of-pocket tradeoff and pricing leverKeep the same across quotes; note any named-storm/wind-hail %
Personal property limit and valuablesEnsures belongings are adequately coveredSchedule jewelry/art with appraisals to bypass sub-limits
Mortgagee (lender) infoNeeded for proof of insurance/escrowHave lender name, loan number, and address
Effective date / prior policy lapseEligibility and pricing can change with gapsAim for a seamless start to avoid lapses

Reminder: Flood and earthquake are not included in standard homeowners policies; if you’re in a higher‑risk area, compare separate flood (NFIP/private) and earthquake options alongside your homeowners quote.

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Find out how much you could save on home insurance today.

Savings & Discounts You Can Actually Qualify For

Not all discounts apply to every home or state, but the right upgrades and settings can noticeably reduce your premium. We’ll surface everything you’re eligible for automatically and show the price impact in real time.

Quick wins (usually easiest to activate)

  • Home + Auto Bundle: Quote both together to unlock multi‑policy pricing.

  • Monitored Security/Fire: Add central‑station burglary + smoke/CO monitoring.

  • Paperless + EFT or Paid‑in‑Full: Opt into e‑docs and autopay or pay the term up front.

Discount playbook (what it is • how to qualify • where it appears)

DiscountWhat It IsHow to QualifyWhere It Appears
Home + Auto BundleMulti-policy credit when the same carrier writes bothShare your current auto details or get an auto quote alongside homeShown as a bundled total vs stand-alone pricing
Claims-FreeCredit for no recent home claimsConfirm last 5 years of loss historyAuto-applied to the base premium when eligible
New Home / Major RenovationNewer construction or substantial system upgrades priced more favorablyProvide year built and dates for roof/electrical/plumbing/HVAC updatesBaked into replacement-cost and rating factors
Monitored Security and FireCentral-station alarm reduces burglary/fire severityEnter provider and account number (upload certificate if available)Line-item device credit
Smart Water Leak Sensors / Auto-ShutoffSensors and shutoff valves lower water-damage frequencyTell us the brand/model or share a photo/invoiceCarrier-specific device credit
Impact-Resistant or New RoofClass 3/4 or recently replaced roofs reduce hail/wind lossesMonth/year of replacement and material; upload installer invoice if availableMaterial/age rating plus possible impact-resistant credit
Wind Mitigation (Coastal)Strengthened roof deck/straps/secondary water barrier; sometimes recognized as FORTIFIEDProvide wind-mitigation inspection form or FORTIFIED certificateSpecial coastal credits (varies by state/carrier)
Wildfire MitigationDefensible space, ember-resistant vents, and home hardeningPhotos or local program certificates where availableCarrier/state-dependent credit in higher-risk ZIPs
Sprinklers / Gated Community / HOA MaintainedReduced fire/severity or theft exposureIndicate sprinkler system or community type in the formCarrier-specific credits
Payment and Policy SetupLower admin costs for e-docs, EFT, or paying in fullChoose paperless and EFT or paid-in-full at checkoutBilling-plan credits

Tips to maximize savings: Keep the same limits/deductibles across quotes while you compare; document roof updates and alarms; and consider bundling auto to unlock multi‑policy pricing without reducing coverage.

Availability and credit amounts vary by insurer and state. We’ll always disclose which discounts were applied and how they affected your price.

Get an Accurate Quote in 90 Seconds (No Snoozers)

Skip the form fatigue here are the five things that actually move your price. Keep these tight and your quotes will be both fast and apples‑to‑apples.

1. Pin your property

Type the full street address (not just ZIP). That’s how carriers price fire access, weather risk, and rebuild costs.

2. Lock down the basics

Year built, square footage, construction & foundation. Include finished basement area so replacement cost isn’t lowballed. 

3. Roof & recent updates

Roof material + year (month/year if replaced). Add update years for electrical, plumbing, HVAC. A quick photo or invoice = fewer surprises.

4. Safety + mitigation = credits

Monitored security/smoke/CO, water‑leak sensors/auto‑shutoff, impact‑resistant roofing, wind‑storm clips/straps, wildfire defensible space. Tell us what you’ve got—carriers reward it.

5. Compare like a pro

Keep the same limits & deductibles across carriers first. Then toggle add‑ons (e.g., water backup, code‑upgrade/Ordinance or Law, service line) to see true price‑for‑coverage changes.

Optional boosts (30‑second add‑ons)

  • List prior claims (5 yrs) with date/type • Pick your liability (many choose $300k–$500k) • Note occupancy (primary/secondary/tenant)

  • Flag valuables to schedule (jewelry/art) • Add lender details for proof of insurance • Set the effective date to avoid gaps

Heads‑up: Standard homeowners policies don’t include flood or earthquake. In many coastal states, named‑storm/wind‑hail percentage deductibles apply; we’ll show them clearly during comparison.

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Find out how much you could save on home insurance today.

Home Insurance Made Local (State-by-State Tips)

Short, scannable notes so shoppers know what to expect in key states.

StateWhat to know (at a glance)Pro tip
California (CA)Wildfire exposure drives eligibility and pricing; the FAIR Plan is a last-resort option. Earthquake coverage is separate.Document wildfire mitigation (defensible space, ember-resistant vents) to improve insurability and ask about credits.
Florida (FL)Named-storm/hurricane deductibles (percentage of Coverage A) are common; Citizens is the residual market in many areas.Order a wind-mitigation inspection; bundle home and auto, and compare NFIP/private flood alongside your homeowners quote.
Texas (TX)Wind/hail risk is a key factor; coastal counties may have separate wind deductibles or TWIA options.Impact-resistant (Class 3/4) roofing and recent roof replacements can help with price and eligibility; keep invoices/photos.
New York (NY)Hurricane deductibles can apply in coastal counties; flood coverage is separate via NFIP.Double-check Loss of Use limits for higher temporary-housing costs in downstate/coastal areas.
Illinois (IL)Severe convective storms (hail/wind) and water damage are common claim drivers.Consider water-backup endorsement and leak-detection devices; ask about credits.
Pennsylvania (PA)Freeze/ice and water-related claims are frequent; basements and sump pumps are common.Add water-backup coverage and verify adequate ALE (Loss of Use) for temporary living expenses.

Expert Insights

It’s very unrealistic for any homeowner to think they can pay for catastrophic losses out of pocket.

– Mark Friedlander, Insurance Information Institute (2025)

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. We show real, bindable prices from licensed carriers, side by side with coverages and deductibles.

No. But most mortgage lenders require it to protect the property.

A standard HO-3 typically includes dwelling, other structures, personal property, loss of use, liability, and guest medical. Flood and earthquake are not included; water-backup is extra.

Many coastal states use named-storm or wind-hail percentage deductibles separate from your all-perils deductible.

ACV pays after depreciation. RCV pays the cost to repair or replace with new items of like kind and quality, subject to your policy terms.

Bundle home and auto, use monitored security and leak sensors, choose deductibles you are comfortable with, and consider mitigation upgrades such as impact-resistant roofing and wind or wildfire measures.

Conclusion

In 2026, Los Angeles homeowners often pay $1,570–$3,048 annually for $300,000 dwelling coverage—well above California's statewide average of roughly $1,335–$1,641—due to heightened wildfire, seismic, and urban risk factors that keep pushing premiums higher.

Yet many overpay simply by renewing without checking alternatives or optimizing their policy.

A quick comparison of quotes reveals how much your specific home details (roof type/age, defensible space, security systems, claim history, bundling) truly affect the price—and frequently uncovers 20–30% savings ($300–$900+ yearly for typical LA homes) through eligible discounts.

Key levers include wildfire mitigation (Class A roofs, ember-resistant vents, cleared zones), monitored alarms, higher deductibles where it makes sense, and claim-free streaks—steps that carriers reward competitively.

Flood and earthquake coverage remain separate (via NFIP or CEA), so focus on core policy tweaks that preserve strong protection while cutting costs.

Shopping around takes minimal effort but delivers real financial relief in a market where rates continue edging up—empowering you to keep more money in your pocket without compromising security.

Sources

  1. National Association of Insurance Commissioners. "Homeowners Insurance."

  2. FEMA. "Build More Resilient Communities With Flood Insurance."

  3. FEMA. "Earthquake Insurance."

  4. FEMA. "Protect Your Property From Wildfires."

  5. Alabama Department of Insurance. "Strengthen Alabama Homes."