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Best Home Insurance for Seniors Over 70 β€” What Actually Works and What to Watch Out For

Budget Seniors, June 20, 2026June 20, 2026
πŸ πŸ›‘οΈ
Senior Homeowner Guide Β· Best Companies Β· Hidden Discounts Β· What Not to Say

Home insurance gets more expensive and more complicated after 70. This guide tells you which companies treat older homeowners well, which discounts most people never ask for, and what mistakes can quietly raise your rate by hundreds of dollars.

πŸ”₯
Breaking β€” Market Stabilizing But Rates Still Up in Most States

The national home insurance market was upgraded from “negative” to “stable” by AM Best in late 2025 β€” the first positive signal in years. But homeowners in most states are still seeing higher premiums at renewal. Florida’s Citizens Insurance cut rates 8.7% starting Spring 2026 (the first cut since 2015), while California homeowners face continued pressure after the Palisades and Eaton fires. Nationally, rates rose an average of 10.4% in 2024 β€” and many of those increases have not fully hit consumers yet. Shopping around at renewal has never mattered more.

🏠 What Changes About Home Insurance After Age 70

Your age does not directly change what home insurance costs β€” unlike car insurance, homeowners premiums are not calculated on the driver’s age. What does change are the factors that happen to correlate with aging: the home itself is older, roof and plumbing are older, and the profile of a long-time homeowner brings both advantages and risks to insurers.

The advantages: seniors who have owned their home for decades tend to have excellent credit scores, long claims-free histories, and no mortgage lender pressure forcing them into over-coverage. Those factors lower premiums. The challenges: older homes have older roofs, older electrical panels, and sometimes older plumbing β€” all of which insurers price more carefully. A roof over 20 years old can either raise your rate significantly or push an insurer to offer only actual cash value (depreciated) rather than replacement cost on that structure.

The good news is that most of the discounts available to seniors over 70 β€” retiree credits, loyalty discounts, claims-free discounts, and senior-specific program pricing β€” go unclaimed because people simply do not know to ask for them. The typical senior homeowner is leaving somewhere between $300 and $600 a year on the table in unclaimed discounts.

πŸ“‹ Key Takeaways β€” Direct Answers First

The most common questions seniors ask about home insurance β€” answered straight, without jargon, before the full explanations below.

  • 1
    What is the best home insurance company for seniors over 70? The Hartford (via AARP): best senior-specific program, up to 20% bundle discount, lifetime renewability Β· AIG: cheapest monthly rate (~$91/mo for no-claims seniors) Β· Amica: top-rated for claims service Β· State Farm: most widely available
    There is no single best company for every senior, because pricing varies dramatically by state, ZIP code, home age, and claims history. That said, The Hartford’s AARP Home Insurance Program has been the most consistently recommended senior-specific program for over 40 years. It is the only national homeowners insurance program that AARP officially endorses, and AARP membership is required to access it. Key features that matter most to seniors over 70: a “disappearing deductible” that reduces your out-of-pocket amount each claims-free year, a retiree discount available in most states, and a guarantee that your policy renews for life as long as you pay premiums. Amica holds the top spot in most independent consumer satisfaction ratings and has some of the best claims experiences reported by older homeowners. For pure affordability on the monthly rate, AIG and Erie consistently come in lowest in independent cost analyses.
  • 2
    How much does home insurance cost for seniors over 70? National average: $800–$1,500/year ($67–$125/month) Β· Cheapest options: AIG ~$91/mo Β· Erie ~$90–$92/mo Β· State Farm ~$151/mo nationally Β· The Hartford (AARP): ~$130–$160/mo Β· High-risk states (Florida, California) significantly higher
    The national average for home insurance runs about $800 to $1,500 per year for typical senior coverage on a $250,000 home β€” but those numbers swing wildly based on location. Florida homeowners still pay roughly three times the national average even after recent rate cuts. California homeowners in wildfire-risk ZIP codes face premiums that have more than doubled in the past three years. In the Midwest and South (outside hurricane zones), rates tend to be most competitive. The most important thing to know about cost: your individual rate is determined by your specific home, not your age β€” so two neighbors in identical houses with different insurers and different discount profiles can pay $100 a month or $250 a month for essentially the same protection. That gap is why shopping around every two to three years at renewal is genuinely worth the hour it takes.
  • 3
    Does AARP have a home insurance discount for seniors? Yes β€” The Hartford’s AARP Home Insurance Program offers exclusive discounts only available to AARP members Β· AARP membership: $12/year Β· Key discount: up to 20% when you bundle home and auto Β· Average reported savings for switchers: $366/year on home insurance
    AARP membership unlocks access to The Hartford’s senior-specific home insurance program, which is not available to the general public. The membership costs $12 per year, which is essentially nothing compared to the potential savings. AARP members who bundle home and auto insurance through The Hartford report an average of $366 per year savings on home insurance alone, and about $597 on auto β€” for a combined average savings of roughly $960 per year when both are bundled. The retiree discount (available if you work fewer than 24 hours a week) applies in most states and is rarely advertised on the quote page β€” you often have to specifically ask. AARP membership is open to anyone 50 and older, so you do not need to wait until your 70s to start taking advantage of these rates.
  • 4
    What discounts do senior homeowners qualify for that most people miss? Retiree/retired status credit Β· Claims-free discount (5–20% for no claims in 3+ years) Β· Loyalty discount for long-term customers Β· Home security system discount Β· Smoke detector and fire alarm discount Β· New roof discount Β· Bundle home and auto discount (biggest savings)
    Most insurers do not automatically apply every discount you qualify for β€” they expect you to ask. The retiree credit is the most commonly missed: if you are retired or work under 24 hours a week, you are statistically home more often, which means fires are caught earlier and small problems get addressed before they become big claims. Insurers reward this with a premium credit that varies by company but typically runs 5–15%. A claims-free history is another powerful lever. Three consecutive years without a claim can reduce premiums by 5–20% depending on the insurer. If you have gone five or more years without a claim, that discount compounds meaningfully. Installing a monitored security system or a simple smoke detector upgrade can add another 5–15% off. Bundling home and auto with the same company is typically the single biggest one-time discount available β€” often 15–20% off home and 5–10% off auto.
  • 5
    Does getting older raise your home insurance rate? Age itself is not a rating factor β€” insurers legally cannot charge more simply because you are older Β· What does raise rates: home age, roof age, claims history, credit score changes Β· Good credit scores (common among long-term homeowners) can save $4,000+ per year compared to poor credit
    Under federal and state insurance regulations, insurers cannot use your age as a direct pricing factor for homeowners insurance the same way they can for car insurance or life insurance. What they do price is the condition and age of the property, your claims history, and your credit score. A 74-year-old with excellent credit, a 10-year-old roof, no claims in the past five years, and a security system will pay less than a 50-year-old with the same house in worse condition. A 2026 independent market analysis found that homeowners with good credit (in the 746–760 range) save an average of $4,437 per year compared to homeowners with poor credit β€” a massive gap. Most seniors who have been financially responsible throughout their lives carry excellent credit, which is one of the most powerful rate moderators available.
  • 6
    What is the “disappearing deductible” and why does it matter for seniors? A feature offered by The Hartford (AARP program) that reduces your deductible by $50–$100 each year you go without a claim Β· After several claims-free years, your out-of-pocket cost in a disaster can drop to zero Β· Particularly valuable for seniors on fixed incomes who cannot easily absorb a large deductible
    The deductible is what you pay out of pocket before insurance covers a loss. Standard deductibles are typically $500 to $2,500 per claim. For a senior on Social Security and a fixed pension, coming up with $1,500 or $2,500 unexpectedly after a pipe burst or storm damage is genuinely stressful. The Hartford’s disappearing deductible feature reduces your deductible by $50 each year you go without a claim β€” so after three years without a loss, you might owe $150 less than your neighbors when something happens. After 10 years, a $500 deductible could drop to zero for qualifying losses. This feature is not glamorous β€” it does not show up prominently in TV ads β€” but for a senior homeowner who has kept a clean claims record for years, it represents real financial protection that other insurers do not offer.
  • 7
    My insurer sent me a non-renewal notice β€” what do I do? Do not panic β€” you have options Β· Contact your state’s Department of Insurance immediately Β· Compare quotes from at least 3 companies Β· Check if your state has a FAIR Plan (insurer of last resort) Β· Consider an independent insurance agent who shops multiple carriers for you
    Non-renewal notices have become more common since 2022, particularly in Florida, California, Louisiana, and parts of Texas, as major insurers have reduced exposure in high-risk areas. Receiving one is alarming but not the end of the road. First: contact your state’s Department of Insurance (every state has one β€” it is a free government resource) to verify the non-renewal is legitimate and understand your rights. In many states you are entitled to 30–90 days’ notice, and some states restrict non-renewals in certain disaster-affected areas. Second: start shopping immediately, because finding a new policy takes time. Get quotes from at least three companies β€” use an independent insurance agent (not a captive agent who sells only one company’s products) who can compare rates from multiple carriers simultaneously. If standard insurers decline to cover your home, your state’s FAIR Plan provides coverage of last resort, though typically at higher rates and more limited coverage.
  • 8
    Is it worth filing a small claim on home insurance after 70? Usually no β€” filing a claim for $1,000–$3,000 can raise your premium by $200–$500/year for 3–5 years, often costing more than the claim itself Β· Rule of thumb: file only when the loss exceeds your deductible by at least $2,000–$3,000 Β· Two claims in 5 years can trigger non-renewal at any age
    This is one of the most important pieces of home insurance advice that rarely appears in official guides. Every claim goes on your insurance record and follows you when you switch companies. A single claim can raise your premium by 20–30% at renewal. Two claims within five years can trigger a non-renewal notice β€” which is a much bigger problem than the original loss. For seniors over 70 who are most concerned about keeping costs stable and maintaining continuous coverage, the threshold for filing a claim should be high: generally, only file if the out-of-pocket loss significantly exceeds your deductible after factoring in three to five years of potential premium increases. Pay small losses out of pocket and protect your claims-free status. That clean record is worth money every year in the form of lower premiums and continued coverage.
πŸ† Top Home Insurance Options for Seniors β€” Side by Side

These are the companies most consistently recommended for senior homeowners in independent ratings and cost analyses. Rates shown are national averages β€” your specific premium depends on your state, home, and claims history. Always get at least three quotes before deciding.

Company Est. Monthly Cost Best Senior Feature Top Discount
The Hartford (AARP) Best for Seniors $130–$160/moAARP membership required ($12/yr) Disappearing deductible, retiree credit, lifetime renewability guarantee Up to 20% off when bundling home + auto through AARP program
AIG ~$91/moCheapest for no-claims seniors (MoneyGeek analysis) Lowest average monthly rate in independent cost analysis for seniors without prior claims Claims-free discount, home security system discount
Amica ~$107/moRated #1 by U.S. News for claims satisfaction Highest-rated claims experience β€” critical if you ever need to use your policy Loyalty discount for long-term customers, bundle savings
Erie Insurance ~$90–$92/moAvailable in 12 states + DC #1 rated regional insurer Β· Guaranteed replacement cost on dwelling at no extra charge in most policies Claims-free, security system, multi-policy bundle
State Farm ~$151/moLargest insurer in the U.S. β€” widest availability Available in nearly all 50 states, large local agent network, easy claims app Home and auto bundle, claims-free, protective device discounts
Travelers Varies widelyStrong in Northeast and Midwest Strong financial stability, green home rebuild credit, valuable add-on options Claims-free, loyalty, home ownership, protective device discounts
⚠️ Important β€” Not Available Everywhere

The Hartford does not write new home policies in California, Florida, Hawaii, or U.S. territories. Erie is only available in 12 states plus Washington D.C. AIG’s pricing advantage is most pronounced in states with lower risk profiles. If you live in a high-risk state β€” particularly California, Florida, Louisiana, or Texas β€” your options may be more limited and rates significantly higher than national averages shown here. Check availability in your specific ZIP code before comparing quotes.

πŸ’° Senior Homeowner Discounts β€” Most People Never Claim These
πŸ‘” Retiree / Retired Status
5–15% off
Available if you work under 24 hrs/week. You’re home more = faster response to problems. Ask every insurer β€” it is rarely applied automatically
βœ… Claims-Free Record
5–20% off
3+ years without a claim earns significant discounts at most carriers. 5+ years is even better. Protecting this record is worth more than small claims
πŸš— Home + Auto Bundle
Up to 20% off
Single biggest available discount. The Hartford AARP bundle saves an average of $960/year total across home and auto when combined
πŸ”’ Security System
5–15% off
Monitored burglar alarms, fire alarms, smart smoke detectors, and deadbolt locks all qualify at most insurers. Even a $30 smoke detector counts
🏠 New Roof or Upgrades
Up to 20% off
A roof under 10 years old earns meaningful discounts. Impact-resistant shingles (hail-resistant) earn extra savings in storm-prone states
πŸ“… Loyalty Discount
Varies by carrier
Staying with the same insurer for 3–5+ years earns loyalty credits at many carriers β€” but these rarely keep pace with market rate increases. Still worth asking about
πŸ” Your Situation β€” The Right Answer for Where You Are
I’m over 70 and shopping for home insurance for the first time in years β€” where do I start?
SHOPPING FROM SCRATCH
If it has been more than three years since you compared rates, you are almost certainly overpaying β€” and the gap has widened because rates have risen sharply while loyalty discounts rarely keep up.

Start here: if you are an AARP member (or willing to pay $12/year to join), call The Hartford directly at 877-422-2345 and ask for a quote through the AARP Home Insurance Program. Specifically mention that you are retired β€” ask about the retiree credit. Ask about bundling home and auto. Get a specific number in writing.

Then get at least two more quotes from other carriers β€” either directly through their websites or through an independent insurance agent (not a captive agent who only sells one company). An independent agent costs you nothing extra; they earn a commission from the insurer, not from you. They can pull quotes from multiple carriers simultaneously and find discounts you would not find on your own.

When comparing quotes, match the coverage levels exactly β€” same dwelling coverage amount, same deductible, same liability limit. A policy that is $600/year cheaper but carries a $5,000 deductible instead of $1,000 is not actually cheaper when something goes wrong.
πŸ“ž The Hartford AARP: 877-422-2345 β€” ask about retiree credit πŸ”Ž Get 3 quotes minimum before deciding πŸ‘€ Use an independent agent β€” free to you, shops multiple carriers πŸ“‹ Compare: same coverage levels, same deductible on each quote
My renewal just came in higher than last year β€” should I shop around or just call my current insurer?
RATE INCREASE AT RENEWAL
Do both β€” but start with a competing quote before calling your insurer, so you have real leverage in the conversation.

Insurers count on renewal inertia. Most people just pay the new bill without questioning it. But getting a lower competing quote and calling to mention it is one of the most reliable ways to reduce your premium β€” many insurers will match or come close to a competitor’s rate rather than lose a long-term customer.

Before you call, gather: your current policy’s declarations page (the summary sheet showing your coverage amounts and deductible), your claims history for the past five years, and any recent home improvements (new roof, security system, updated plumbing or electrical). All of these can qualify you for discounts that are not automatically applied.

When you call, ask specifically: “What discounts am I currently receiving on this policy?” and “What discounts am I eligible for that I am not currently getting?” These are two different questions β€” the second one often reveals credits you have been missing for years. A retiree credit, a claims-free credit, and a fire/smoke alarm discount together can sometimes offset a rate increase entirely.
πŸ“‹ Get a competing quote first β€” gives you negotiating leverage πŸ“ž Ask: “What discounts am I not currently getting?” 🏠 Mention home improvements β€” new roof, updated systems ⚠️ If they won’t negotiate, switching is a legitimate and worthwhile option
I live in Florida or California β€” my insurer dropped me or rates are extreme. What can I do?
HIGH-RISK STATES
This is the most difficult situation in home insurance right now, and it is not your fault β€” major carriers have pulled back from both states due to wildfire (California) and hurricane/litigation costs (Florida).

Florida options: Florida’s rate environment is beginning to ease. Citizens Insurance (Florida’s state-backed insurer) implemented rate cuts starting Spring 2026 for the first time since 2015. State Farm cut rates 10% in the state. Start with an independent agent who specializes in Florida property insurance and can access smaller admitted carriers, surplus lines carriers, and Citizens. Do not assume Citizens is the most expensive option β€” in some ZIP codes it is now competitive. Ask specifically about claims-free discounts and wind mitigation credits, which are uniquely significant in Florida.

California options: California’s FAIR Plan (the state’s insurer of last resort) is now the backup for hundreds of thousands of homeowners in wildfire-prone areas. It offers basic fire coverage but lacks the liability and theft coverage of a standard policy β€” you need to pair it with a “Difference in Conditions” (DIC) policy from a private insurer. Nine new consumer protection laws took effect in California in early 2026, including expanded insurance discounts for homeowners who take specific wildfire-hardening steps. Contact the California Department of Insurance’s free helpline to understand your options: 1-800-927-4357.
🌴 Florida: Citizens cuts 8.7% statewide Spring 2026 β€” get a new quote 🌲 California: FAIR Plan + DIC policy combination for wildfire areas πŸ“ž CA Dept of Insurance help: 1-800-927-4357 (free) πŸ‘€ Use a Florida/CA specialist independent agent β€” not a national captive agent
I own my home outright (no mortgage) β€” do I still need home insurance?
PAID-OFF HOME Β· NO LENDER
Legally, no. Practically, yes β€” and skipping it at this stage of life carries more financial risk than at any other.

When there is no mortgage, no lender is requiring you to carry insurance. Many paid-off homeowners quietly drop coverage to save money, especially after retirement when income is fixed. This is one of the most financially dangerous decisions an older homeowner can make.

Your home is likely your largest asset β€” often representing the majority of your net worth. A house fire, a flood, a major roof collapse, or a liability lawsuit (someone falls on your property, sues, and wins) can be financially devastating without insurance. Social Security and a modest pension cannot absorb a $200,000 uninsured loss. And rebuilding costs have escalated sharply β€” labor and materials are 30–40% more expensive than they were five years ago, meaning a loss that would have cost $150,000 to repair in 2020 might cost $200,000 or more today.

If cost is the concern: reduce your coverage intelligently rather than eliminating it. Raise your deductible (you can self-insure small losses), remove optional riders you no longer need, and apply every available discount. The goal is the lowest-cost policy that still protects you from catastrophic loss β€” not zero coverage.
⚠️ Never drop coverage entirely β€” one uninsured loss can be life-altering πŸ’‘ Raise deductible to lower premium β€” self-insure small losses πŸ”Ž Review what optional coverages you actually need πŸ“‹ Liability coverage is still critical even with no mortgage
What should I NOT say or do when talking to my home insurer β€” what makes rates go up?
WHAT NOT TO SAY
Several things homeowners commonly say or do can unintentionally raise their rates or trigger policy reviews β€” and most people have no idea.

Do not call to “ask about” a potential claim. Even calling your insurer to ask whether a loss would be covered β€” without actually filing a claim β€” can be recorded in the insurance claims database (C.L.U.E. report) as an “inquiry” that some insurers weigh negatively. If you have a small loss, research the coverage in your policy yourself or call an independent agent before contacting your insurer directly.

Do not mention anything about your home’s condition that is not being asked about. If your insurer sends someone to inspect the property, make sure deferred maintenance (peeling paint, cracked walkways, old deck boards) is addressed first. Inspection reports noting poor condition can lead to policy non-renewals.

Do not let your credit score drop without addressing it. Credit score is one of the biggest pricing factors in home insurance in most states. Missing bills or carrying high credit card balances in retirement can quietly raise your premium by hundreds of dollars per year.

Do not ignore letters from your insurer. Non-renewal notices often have short response windows. Missing the deadline can leave you without coverage until a new policy starts β€” a gap that is considered a lapse and will raise your future rates.
⚠️ Never call to “ask about” a claim β€” it can be recorded against you 🏚️ Fix deferred maintenance before any property inspection πŸ’³ Protect your credit score β€” it directly affects your premium πŸ“¬ Read every letter from your insurer β€” non-renewal deadlines are strict
I moved to a condo or 55+ community β€” do I still need homeowners insurance or is the HOA enough?
CONDO Β· 55+ COMMUNITY
The HOA’s master policy covers the building exterior and common areas β€” it does not cover the inside of your unit, your personal belongings, or your personal liability. You need a separate condo owner’s policy (called HO-6 insurance).

This is one of the most widespread misunderstandings among senior condo owners and 55+ community residents. The building’s master policy stops at your walls. If a pipe bursts inside your unit, damages your floors and furniture, and water leaks into the unit below yours β€” your HOA policy covers none of that. Your HO-6 condo policy covers the interior of your unit (walls, floors, fixtures), your personal belongings, temporary living expenses if your unit becomes uninhabitable, and liability protection if someone is hurt inside your home.

HO-6 condo insurance is typically far cheaper than a standard homeowners policy β€” often $100 to $400 per year for a condo β€” because you are only insuring the interior, not the structure. It is the least expensive form of homeowners coverage, and skipping it is almost never worth the financial risk. The Hartford’s AARP program also offers condo insurance, which makes it easy to bundle your condo and auto policies together for additional savings.
⚠️ HOA master policy does NOT cover your unit’s interior or belongings 🏒 HO-6 condo policy: typically $100–$400/year β€” well worth it πŸ›‹οΈ Covers: interior, belongings, liability, additional living expenses πŸ’° Bundle condo + auto through AARP/Hartford for maximum discount
πŸ“ Find Local Insurance Help Near You

Use the buttons below to find independent insurance agents, insurance offices, and state insurance assistance offices near you. An independent agent can compare multiple carriers simultaneously at no cost to you.

Searching near you…
πŸ”‘ Quick Reference β€” Key Contacts & Resources
πŸ“ž The Hartford AARP Home Insurance: 877-422-2345 🌐 AARP membership (required for Hartford): aarp.org ($12/year) πŸ“ž California Dept of Insurance help: 1-800-927-4357 (free) 🌐 Find your state’s Dept of Insurance: naic.org/state_web_map.htm πŸ“‹ Check your claims history (C.L.U.E. report): lexisnexis.com/clue (free once/year) πŸ”Ž Find independent agents: trustedchoice.com or iiaba.net 🌴 Florida Citizens Insurance info: citizensfla.com 🌲 California FAIR Plan: cfpnet.com
βœ… 5-Step Checklist β€” Before You Renew or Switch
  • Step 1 β€” Pull your C.L.U.E. report before shopping. This is your insurance claims history, used by every insurer to price your policy. You are entitled to one free copy per year at lexisnexis.com/clue. Know what is on it β€” errors do happen and can be disputed.
  • Step 2 β€” List every discount you might qualify for. Retired or working under 24 hours a week? No claims in the past 3 years? Smoke detectors, security system, deadbolts? New roof in the past 10 years? Updated plumbing or electrical? Each one is worth money β€” bring this list when you get quotes.
  • Step 3 β€” Get at least three quotes before renewing. Use an independent agent who can shop multiple carriers, and include The Hartford AARP if you are an AARP member (or willing to join). Renewal inertia costs the average senior homeowner $300–$600 per year in preventable overpayment.
  • Step 4 β€” Compare the actual coverage, not just the premium. Check dwelling coverage (should reflect current rebuild costs, not your purchase price), deductible amount, whether personal property is at replacement cost or actual cash value, and the liability limit. A cheaper policy with worse coverage is not a better deal.
  • Step 5 β€” Never file a small claim without thinking it through. Calculate your potential premium increase (roughly 20–30% per year for 3–5 years) against the net benefit of the claim (loss amount minus your deductible). If filing costs you more in future premiums than the claim pays out, pay out of pocket and protect your claims-free discount.

Home insurance pricing, availability, discounts, and coverage terms vary significantly by state, ZIP code, insurer, and individual property profile. Rates cited in this guide reflect independent published analyses as of mid-2026 and are averages β€” your actual premium will differ. AARP membership and The Hartford program availability may vary by state. The Hartford does not write new home policies in California, Florida, Hawaii, or U.S. territories. This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute insurance advice. Always consult a licensed insurance professional for guidance specific to your situation. This page has no financial affiliation with The Hartford, AARP, State Farm, AIG, Amica, Erie, Travelers, or any insurer mentioned.

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