Oklahoma Requires Insurers to Justify Rate Hikes as Average Home Premiums Hit $5,736
Updated
Updated · POLITICO · Jun 16
Oklahoma Requires Insurers to Justify Rate Hikes as Average Home Premiums Hit $5,736
1 articles · Updated · POLITICO · Jun 16
Summary
Gov. Kevin Stitt signed a bill requiring Oklahoma insurers to explain to regulators why they want higher rates, marking the state's first such transparency mandate.
The move follows a sharp rise in homeowner costs—now averaging $5,736 a year, second-highest nationally—as hail, wind and wildfire risks push premiums higher.
The law does not take effect until July 2027, leaving insurers free under the current system to raise rates first and notify the insurance department afterward.
The change has become a political issue in statewide races, with insurance commissioner candidates backing more transparency while warning aggressive price controls could destabilize the market.
Oklahoma joins a broader state-level rethink of insurance oversight, as places from Illinois to California adjust rules after mounting climate-driven losses and insurer pullbacks.