Texas home insurance
Texas Home Insurance Policy: The Complete 2026 Guide
What a standard policy actually covers, what it leaves out, what it costs across the state right now, and the new disclosure law every Texas homeowner should know about before their next renewal.
If you’ve started shopping for a Texas home insurance policy in the last year, you’ve probably noticed something: prices have moved, several big-name carriers have quietly pulled back in certain counties, and the rules around how your insurer can treat you just changed. None of the carrier landing pages out there mention that last part, because none of them want to lead with the fact that the market is tightening.
This guide is different. It walks through how a standard Texas homeowners policy is actually built, where the real gaps are, what people are genuinely paying in 2026, and a brand-new state law that gives you leverage you didn’t have a year ago. No quote forms, no “click here for your rate” buttons — just the information you need before you talk to an agent or sign a renewal.
What a Texas Home Insurance Policy Actually Is
A homeowners policy in Texas is a bundle of separate coverages sold as one contract. Most carriers use the HO-3 form, which insures your house on an “open peril” basis (covered unless specifically excluded) and your belongings on a “named peril” basis (covered only for the perils listed in the policy). That distinction matters more than most people realize — it’s why a claim for storm damage to your roof often gets approved instantly while a claim for water damage to your furniture from the same storm gets scrutinized line by line.
Texas homeowners insurance is not mandated by state law. Nobody can fine you for skipping it. But it is mandated by your mortgage contract — every major lender requires continuous coverage for as long as they hold a lien on your home, and they will force-place an expensive, minimal policy on your behalf if you let coverage lapse.
What’s Covered in a Standard Policy
Texas insurers structure coverage into six lettered sections. Knowing the letters helps you read your own declarations page instead of guessing:
- Coverage A — Dwelling: Rebuilds the physical structure of your home after a covered loss like fire, lightning, or hail.
- Coverage B — Other Structures: Detached garages, fences, sheds, and similar structures not attached to the main house.
- Coverage C — Personal Property: Furniture, clothing, electronics, and other belongings, usually at 50–70% of your Coverage A limit.
- Coverage D — Loss of Use: Hotel bills and living expenses if a covered loss makes your home temporarily unlivable.
- Coverage E — Personal Liability: Legal and medical costs if someone is injured on your property and you’re found responsible.
- Coverage F — Medical Payments to Others: Small medical bills for guests injured on your property, regardless of fault.
Wind, hail, fire, lightning, and most tornado damage are typically covered under a standard policy — which matters a lot in a state that consistently leads the nation in hail events. What’s missing from that list is just as important, and it’s where most underinsured homeowners get caught off guard.
What a Standard Policy Does NOT Cover
Other common exclusions include earth movement (earthquakes, sinkholes, land subsidence), poor maintenance or wear and tear, pest infestations, mold beyond a small sub-limit, and — for many coastal and high-risk-roof homes — windstorm coverage itself, which we’ll cover next.
TWIA and the Coastal Windstorm Problem
If you live in one of 14 designated coastal counties, or in the eastern part of Harris County along Galveston Bay, your standard policy may exclude wind and hail entirely. That’s where the Texas Windstorm Insurance Association, or TWIA, comes in. It’s a state-created insurer of last resort that sells standalone wind and hail coverage when the private market won’t.
TWIA isn’t cheap, and it isn’t optional if you’re in a designated catastrophe zone and your regular carrier excludes wind — your mortgage lender will require it. Recent legislative activity has focused on TWIA’s installment payment options, making premiums easier to spread across the year instead of paying in one lump sum.
The Texas FAIR Plan: Your Last Resort
If at least two licensed Texas insurers have turned you down for coverage — often because of an aging roof, prior claims, or a high-risk location — you may qualify for the Texas FAIR Plan Association. It provides basic, no-frills dwelling coverage when nobody else will write you a policy. It’s intentionally more expensive and less comprehensive than standard coverage, designed as a safety net rather than a long-term solution. The honest move, if you end up here, is to use the FAIR Plan as a bridge while you address whatever made you uninsurable — typically a roof replacement — and shop the standard market again afterward.
What Texas Homeowners Are Actually Paying in 2026
Forget generic “average cost” numbers — here’s what the spread actually looks like right now, based on current industry rate data for a policy with $300,000 in dwelling coverage:
| Carrier / Benchmark | Approximate Annual Premium |
|---|---|
| State Farm (lowest in recent comparisons) | ~$3,347 |
| Statewide average | ~$4,510 |
| Progressive-underwritten policies (2025 average) | ~$2,255 |
| Progressive (highest in recent comparisons) | ~$9,164 |
That’s a gap of nearly $6,000 a year between the cheapest and most expensive options for an identical coverage limit. The spread exists because Texas runs a competitive rating system — insurers set their own prices off their own risk models and file them with the state, rather than working from a single regulated rate table. That makes comparison shopping genuinely worth the hour it takes, every single renewal.
Roof age, distance from the coast, your home’s claims history, and even your credit-based insurance score all move the number. A 2% wind and hail deductible on a $300,000 home, for example, means $6,000 out of pocket before coverage kicks in on a storm claim — worth checking on your own declarations page right now if you don’t already know your number.
The New 2026 Law Every Texas Homeowner Should Know
The law also requires insurers to report these reasons to the Texas Department of Insurance by ZIP code on a quarterly basis, with public disclosure to follow. In practical terms, this means two things for you. First, if you’ve ever been non-renewed without explanation, that should no longer happen quietly — and if it does, you have grounds to file a complaint with TDI. Second, once the ZIP-code-level data starts becoming public, it will become much easier to see exactly which neighborhoods carriers are pulling back from and why, instead of finding out only when your own renewal notice arrives.
This transparency push didn’t happen in a vacuum. Several major carriers have tightened underwriting in Texas coastal counties over the past two years — some requiring roofs under 10 years old for full replacement-cost coverage, others limiting new business near tidal surge zones. The new disclosure rule is a direct response to homeowners getting non-renewed with little to no explanation during that pullback.
The Credit Score Re-Review Rule
A related but separate change worth flagging: under Senate Bill 1644, insurers are now required to review and update your credit report at least every three years and adjust your policy rating accordingly, rather than locking in a score from years ago. If your credit has improved since you bought your home, this rule gives you a built-in path to a lower premium without having to switch carriers — but it also means a credit dip could now show up in your renewal price faster than before. Either way, it’s worth asking your agent directly when your file was last refreshed.
How to Actually Choose a Policy
- Confirm your dwelling limit reflects rebuild cost, not market value. Construction costs in Texas have outpaced home values in some markets — insuring to your purchase price can leave you tens of thousands short after a total loss.
- Check your wind/hail deductible in dollars, not just percent. A “2%” deductible sounds small until you calculate it against your actual coverage limit.
- Ask explicitly whether windstorm is included or excluded. Coastal and some inland high-risk homes have it carved out entirely — don’t assume.
- Get a flood quote even if you’re not in a mapped flood zone. A large share of Texas flood claims come from outside official flood zones every year.
- Compare at least three carriers at identical coverage limits. Given the price spread shown above, skipping this step is the single most expensive mistake a Texas homeowner can make.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is home insurance legally required in Texas?
Does a standard Texas home insurance policy cover flooding?
What is TWIA and who actually needs it?
Why did my insurer raise my rate or decline to renew me?
How much does home insurance cost in Texas right now?