Stock Markets April 9, 2026 07:32 AM

Truist: Florida Property Insurance Costs Have Dropped About 20% Year‑Over‑Year

Declining premiums ease a key input cost for manufactured-home REITs but variability across portfolios and regions remains

By Hana Yamamoto ELS AON SUI
Truist: Florida Property Insurance Costs Have Dropped About 20% Year‑Over‑Year
ELS AON SUI

Truist Securities reports that Florida property insurance premiums have fallen roughly 20% year-over-year after peaking in 2023, a development that could help offset weather-related revenue pressures for listed manufactured-home communities. The decline is uneven across coverage layers and geographies, with state and private insurers showing differing degrees of repricing.

Key Points

  • Florida surplus lines premiums peaked in 2023 at about $40,000 to $45,000 per policy, then declined through 2024 and 2025, including 46% and 39% drops in Q3 and Q4 2025 respectively.
  • Aon and Florida Risk Partners data show reductions concentrated in catastrophe-exposed layers and commercial property pricing; Citizens Insurance approved statewide reductions averaging roughly 8.7%, with larger cuts in Miami‑Dade and Broward.
  • Truist estimates blended insurance cost declines of ~14% for Equity LifeStyle Properties (ELS) and ~12% for Sun Communities (SUI) based on a 20% Florida decrease and a 9% decline elsewhere.

Florida property insurance premiums have retreated by roughly 20% year-over-year following a peak in 2023, Truist Securities reported on Thursday. The firm said the reduction in premium costs may provide partial relief for companies with concentrated Florida exposure, where weather-related revenue impacts have been a recent concern.

Truist cited Florida surplus lines data showing premiums climbed to about $40,000 to $45,000 per policy at their 2023 peak before easing through 2024 and into 2025. The firm noted sharp quarterly moves in 2025, with premiums down 46% in the third quarter and 39% in the fourth quarter.

Industry data highlighted by Truist show that the declines are concentrated in certain layers of coverage and specific portfolios. Aon reported that select portfolios have seen cuts in the 25% to 40% range, particularly in catastrophe-exposed layers. Florida Risk Partners documented reductions of 8% to 25% in commercial property pricing, and about 47% lower surplus lines windstorm premiums.

On the state side, Citizens Insurance - Florida’s insurer of last resort - approved average premium reductions of about 8.7% statewide. Reductions were larger in parts of South Florida, with roughly 14% decreases in Miami-Dade and Broward counties and about 12% in Palm Beach County.

Truist’s insurance analyst Mark Hughes said pricing has moved back toward long-term averages, adding that most of the repricing appears to have already occurred. The implication, in Truist’s view, is that the most acute phase of market repricing may be behind insurers and insureds.

The change in insurance costs is material for publicly traded manufactured-home community operators with sizable Florida footprints. Truist highlighted Equity LifeStyle Properties (ELS), which derives roughly 46% of revenue from Florida, and Sun Communities (SUI), which gets about 27% of revenue from the state.

Using an assumption of a 20% drop in Florida insurance costs combined with a 9% decline elsewhere in the U.S., Truist estimates a blended insurance cost decrease of roughly 14% for Equity LifeStyle Properties and about 12% for Sun Communities. For context, Equity LifeStyle recorded nearly $45 million of insurance expense in 2025, representing approximately 41% of its insurance, administrative and other expense line. Sun Communities reported roughly $26 million of insurance expense within its North America portfolio.

Reflecting its view of the sector and individual company fundamentals, Truist maintains a Hold rating on Equity LifeStyle Properties and a Buy rating on Sun Communities.


Key takeaways

  • Florida property insurance premiums fell about 20% year-over-year after peaking in 2023, with steep quarterly declines in 2025.
  • Reductions are uneven by coverage layer and geography, with notable cuts in catastrophe-exposed layers and state-level premium approvals varying by county.
  • The change in insurance costs materially affects REITs with concentrated Florida exposure, including ELS and SUI.

Analyst view

Truist’s Mark Hughes indicated that pricing has largely returned near long-term averages and that much of the market repricing looks to have occurred.

Implications

Lower insurance costs could help blunt weather-related revenue weakness for companies with heavy Florida exposure, though the magnitude of relief will vary by company and coverage composition.

Risks

  • Uncertainty over whether the observed premium declines will fully offset first-quarter weather-related revenue impacts at companies with heavy Florida exposure.
  • Variability across portfolios and coverage layers means some insurers and insureds may not experience the same degree of cost relief, creating uneven financial effects across the sector.
  • State-level and regional differences in premium reductions — for example, the range between statewide Citizens reductions and larger declines in some South Florida counties — inject geographic risk into company-level outcomes.

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