How much does home insurance cost in Texas?

Homeowners insurance in Texas is 66% more expensive than the national average due to the amount of severe weather it gets, including tornadoes, hurricanes, strong wind, and hail.

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By

Andrew HurstSenior Editor & Licensed Insurance ExpertAndrew Hurst is a former senior editor at Policygenius who has spent his entire career writing about life, disability, home, auto, and health insurance. His work has been featured in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, Forbes, USA Today, NPR, Mic, Insurance Business Magazine, and Property Casualty 360.

Edited by

Jennifer GimbelJennifer GimbelSenior Managing Editor & Home Insurance ExpertJennifer Gimbel is a senior managing editor at Policygenius, where she oversees all of our insurance coverage. Previously, she was the managing editor at Finder.com and a content strategist at Babble.com.

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Key takeaways

  • Average home insurance cost in Texas: $2,919 per year, $243 per month 

  • Cheapest cities: El Paso, Brownsville, Austin

  • Most expensive cities: Amarillo, Arlington, Grand Prairie

  • What impacts rates in Texas: Severe weather, increase in the cost of rebuilding homes

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How much is homeowners insurance in Texas?

The average cost of homeowners insurance in Texas is $243 per month or $2,919 per year for $300,000 in dwelling coverage — that’s the coverage that protects your actual house. Home insurance in Texas is around 66% more expensive than the national average of $1,754 per year.

In a state like Texas, premiums are higher in large part due to the outsized risk of natural disasters in certain areas. As hurricanes, tornadoes, and hail continue to worsen and cause extensive damage to homes all over the state, insurance companies account for this by charging higher rates.

Methodology & why you can trust our rates

Policygenius has analyzed home insurance rates provided by Quadrant Information Services in March 2022 for ZIP codes in all 50 states plus Washington, D.C., for a 40-year-old female homeowner with no claim history, good credit, a $1,000 deductible, and the following coverage limits:

  • Dwelling: $300,000

  • Other structures: $30,000

  • Personal property: $150,000

  • Loss of use: $60,000

  • Liability: $300,000

  • Medical: $1,000

All rates based on the above coverage limits except where otherwise noted.

Some carriers may be represented by affiliates or subsidiaries. Rates provided are a sample of costs. Your actual quotes may differ.

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Texas home insurance rates by city

El Paso, Brownsville, and Austin have the cheapest homeowners insurance rates in Texas (among the Lone Star State’s 20 largest cities). In El Paso the average cost of homeowners insurance is 42% cheaper than the statewide average.

City

Average monthly cost

Average annual cost

Difference from state average (%)

Houston

$245

$2,936

1%

San Antonio

$197

$2,365

-19%

Dallas

$274

$3,284

13%

Austin

$180

$2,158

-26%

Fort Worth

$272

$3,258

12%

El Paso

$140

$1,679

-42%

Arlington

$282

$3,378

16%

Corpus Christi

$206

$2,466

-16%

Plano

$269

$3,228

11%

Lubbock

$271

$3,257

12%

Laredo

$190

$2,277

-22%

Irving

$276

$3,307

13%

Garland

$268

$3,210

10%

Frisco

$236

$2,833

-3%

McKinney

$268

$3,217

10%

Grand Prairie

$280

$3,360

15%

Amarillo

$304

$3,649

25%

Brownsville

$176

$2,109

-28%

Killeen

$181

$2,170

-26%

Denton

$269

$3,223

10%

Collapse table

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Texas home insurance rates by coverage amount

One of the most important (and expensive) parts of your home insurance policy is your dwelling coverage, which protects the physical structure of your home from covered hazards like hurricanes, wind (including tornadoes), and hail.

The amount of dwelling coverage you need depends on the replacement cost of your homenot its market value. If you paid $600,000 for a home that would cost $400,000 to rebuild, you’d only need $400,000 in dwelling coverage, not $600,000.

What you pay for homeowners insurance depends in part on the amount of dwelling coverage you buy — more coverage means higher premiums. As the following table shows, the $893 per year difference between the cost of a policy with $400,000 and $500,000 in dwelling coverage is the largest rate jump in Texas.

Dwelling coverage limit

Average annual cost

$100,000

$1,318

$200,000

$2,086

$300,000

$2,919

$400,000

$3,749

$500,000

$4,642

Why are home insurance rates in Texas going up?

Home insurance rates are going up in Texas because the state is at high risk for severe weather damage due to hurricanes, tornadoes, wildfires, flooding, and even snow storms. Since there’s a higher chance of homeowners filing a claim, insurance companies charge higher rates to account for the added risk.

Homeowners in the Lone Star State paid an average of 10.8% more for home insurance in 2022 compared to the previous year — the largest average yearly rate increase in 10 years, according to the Texas Department of Insurance.

Insurance regulators approved 32 rate increase requests from several top insurance carriers in 2022, including State Farm and Liberty Mutual. If your home insurance bill went up recently, that may be one of the culprits.

Learn more >> Why did my home insurance rates go up in 2024?

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Author

Andrew Hurst is a former senior editor at Policygenius who has spent his entire career writing about life, disability, home, auto, and health insurance. His work has been featured in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, Forbes, USA Today, NPR, Mic, Insurance Business Magazine, and Property Casualty 360.

Editor

Jennifer Gimbel is a senior managing editor at Policygenius, where she oversees all of our insurance coverage. Previously, she was the managing editor at Finder.com and a content strategist at Babble.com.

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