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Q:

How much should homeowners insurance be on a $400,000 house?

I own (or am planning to buy) a home valued at around $400,000 and I’m trying to figure out how much homeowners insurance should cost. Specifically, I’d like to understand:

    • What a typical annual or monthly premium range might be for a $400,000 home.
    • How factors like location, home age, construction type, and local weather risks (e.g., hurricanes, earthquakes, floods) affect the cost.
    • Whether the cost should be based on the market value of the home or the cost to rebuild it from scratch.
    • What coverage levels (e.g., dwelling coverage, personal property, liability, loss of use) are recommended for a home of this value.
    • How deductible size affects the premium.
    • Any real examples or quotes people with similar homes have received.

Can anyone share detailed pointers or real costs they’ve seen for homeowners insurance on a $400,000 house?

  • This topic was modified 1 month ago by Alex Cruz.
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  • Depending on your area:

    • In a low‑risk area I know people around $900–$1,400/year for homes like yours.
    • In hurricane/flood areas or older homes, $2,000–$3,500+ isn’t unusual.

    What REALLY matters is this:
    Replacement cost — insurance is meant to pay to rebuild your home, not the market value. So you base it on what the builder would charge.
    Deductible — bigger deductible = lower premium. If you pick $2,000 or $5,000 and nothing ever happens, you saved money but risked paying more when you do claim.
    Weather & risk zones — if you risk hurricanes, earthquakes, floods you may need extra riders which can double the price.

    I personally went with a policy that gave enough dwelling coverage to actually rebuild — I didn’t choose the ultra cheap one that left gaps in replacement coverage.

  • Our last home (~$400k replacement cost) ended up costing about $1,500/year for insurance with good coverage:

    • Dwelling: coverage equal to full rebuild cost
    • Personal property: about 50–70% of dwelling
    • Liability: at $300k
    • Loss of use: included

    We chose a $1,000 deductible, which felt safe — when we raised it to $2,500, we dropped the premium by a few hundred bucks. If you’re young and healthy, a higher deductible makes sense; if you don’t have a big savings cushion, a lower one might be better.

    Also ask agents about discounts for updated systems (roof, electrical, plumbing) — we saved a good chunk from that alone.

  • Insurance quotes on a $400k house are like car insurance quotes — nobody pays the first thing they see. 😂 I got quoted $1,100/year, and then my buddy in the same city with basically the same house got $2,300/year. What changed? He has an old roof and no security system.

    If you want cheaper:

    • Bump the deductible to $2k or $5k.
    • Bundle home + auto.
    • Add alarms/security systems.

    But don’t cheap out so much that you can’t pay to rebuild if the house burns down. Then you’re just saving pennies and risking dollars.

  • Man, I was shocked by the numbers. I have a ~$400k house and got one quote for $900/year and another for $2,500/year — same coverage limits, same address. The only differences were company and deductible size. 😵‍💫

    Some useful stuff I learned:

    • Insurers price based on replacement cost (what it would cost to rebuild) not what Zillow says your house is worth.
    • Bigger deductibles = lower premiums, but you pay more out of pocket if something happens.
    • A friend in tornado country pays like $3,000/year because of hail risk alone.
  • For a $400,000 home, a typical homeowners insurance premium for me was around $1,200–$1,800 per year ($100–$150/month). That was with fairly standard coverage — dwelling & personal property at replacement cost, decent liability, and loss of use.

    Important things that changed the price:

    • Location — I’m in a storm‑prone area, so my quote was higher than friends in the Midwest.
    • Home age & materials — older roofs or wood siding bumped my premium up a few hundred dollars.
    • Weather risk — if you’re in hurricane, earthquake, or flood zones, expect much higher prices (and you might need separate flood or quake coverage).

     

    Also remember insurance is really priced on replacement cost to rebuild, not the market value of the house. If rebuilding your house would cost $350k because of land value or whatnot, that’s what insurers use, not the $400k market price.

    • This reply was modified 4 weeks, 1 day ago by Samuel.

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