The 2025 Atlantic hurricane season delivered $42 billion in insured losses across the Gulf Coast, and Texas took a disproportionate hit. In 2026, coastal commercial property premiums are up 12–25%, several admitted carriers have tightened underwriting or exited coastal books, and the E&S (surplus lines) market now accounts for over 28% of Texas commercial property premium volume. Inland Texas is faring better with single-digit increases. Multifamily owners need to start renewals 120+ days early, invest in wind mitigation, and work with independent agents who access both admitted and surplus lines markets. Texas Property Risk shops A-rated carriers across both markets to find competitive coverage — even in hardening conditions.
What Happened in the 2025 Hurricane Season
The 2025 Atlantic hurricane season was the fourth-costliest on record. NOAA recorded 19 named storms, 9 hurricanes, and 4 major hurricanes (Category 3+). Texas was directly impacted by two significant events:
- Hurricane Mariana (Category 3): Made landfall near Matagorda Bay in August 2025 with 120 mph sustained winds. Estimated insured losses of $14–18 billion across the Texas coast, with severe damage to commercial properties in Victoria, Port Lavaca, and the Houston metro area.
- Tropical Storm Xavier: A slow-moving rain event in October 2025 that dumped 20–30 inches on the Beaumont–Port Arthur corridor over 4 days. Flooding caused an estimated $3–5 billion in commercial and residential losses — much of it uninsured due to gaps in flood coverage.
Sources: NOAA National Hurricane Center 2025 Season Summary; Insurance Information Institute (III) preliminary loss estimates; Aon 2025 Weather, Climate & Catastrophe Insight Report.
Since 2017, Texas has experienced $180+ billion in total insured catastrophe losses from hurricanes, hail, and severe convective storms (TDI, III). Hurricane Harvey alone (2017) caused $125 billion in total damages. This cumulative loss history is the primary driver of the state's insurance market hardening — carriers aren't just pricing for next year's risk, they're recovering from a decade of losses.
Premium Trends: What Multifamily Owners Are Seeing at Renewal
The rate environment in early 2026 varies dramatically based on location, claims history, and building characteristics. Here's what the market looks like by region:
| Region | 2026 Rate Change | Carrier Availability | Key Factor |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gulf Coast (Houston, Galveston, Corpus Christi) | +15–25% | Limited; E&S dominant | Direct hurricane exposure + claims |
| Southeast Texas (Beaumont, Port Arthur) | +18–30% | Very limited | Flood + wind combination |
| Rio Grande Valley (Brownsville, McAllen) | +10–18% | Moderate | Near-miss proximity + TWIA reliance |
| Central Texas (Austin, San Antonio) | +5–8% | Strong | Hail risk, not hurricane |
| North Texas (Dallas-Fort Worth) | +6–10% | Strong | Hail Alley convective storms |
| West Texas (Lubbock, Midland-Odessa) | +3–7% | Adequate | Lower cat exposure |
Sources: Council of Insurance Agents & Brokers (CIAB) Q4 2025 Commercial P&C Market Survey; Marsh Global Insurance Market Index Q1 2026; Texas Surplus Lines Stamping Office data.
Properties with 2025 Claims: Expect the Worst
If your property filed a hurricane or flood claim during the 2025 season, prepare for a difficult renewal. Industry data shows:
- Single claim under $100K: 20–35% premium increase, possible non-renewal from current carrier
- Claim over $100K: 30–50% increase; likely moved to surplus lines if currently admitted
- Multiple claims in 3 years: Non-renewal almost certain; E&S market or TWIA may be only options
Carrier Availability: Who's Still Writing Coastal Texas?
The post-2025 carrier landscape in Texas looks substantially different from 2024. Here's how the major market segments have shifted:
Admitted Market (TDI-Licensed Carriers)
- National carriers (Travelers, Hartford, Liberty Mutual): Selective on new coastal business. Most require 2%+ named storm deductibles and wind-mitigation documentation. Renewals honored for profitable accounts but with 10–20% rate increases.
- Regional Texas carriers (TPCIGA members): Some have reduced coastal capacity by 15–30%. Others are maintaining books but with stricter underwriting — newer construction, lower TIV limits, mandatory inspections.
- AM Best downgrades: Two smaller Texas-focused carriers received negative outlook ratings in late 2025 due to hurricane losses, reducing available capacity further.
E&S / Surplus Lines Market
The surplus lines market has become the de facto primary market for many coastal Texas commercial properties. According to the Surplus Lines Stamping Office of Texas (SLSOT):
- Surplus lines premium volume in Texas grew 18% in 2025 to over $12.8 billion — the highest in state history
- Commercial property was the fastest-growing E&S line at 24% year-over-year growth
- Major E&S carriers actively writing Texas coastal: Lloyd's syndicates, Lexington (AIG), Scottsdale (Nationwide), Markel, and Kinsale
- E&S premiums run 20–50% higher than admitted market for comparable coverage, but provide critical capacity
Source: Surplus Lines Stamping Office of Texas (SLSOT) 2025 Annual Report; AM Best Surplus Lines Market Review.
Surplus lines policies are not backed by the Texas Property and Casualty Guaranty Association. If your E&S carrier becomes insolvent, there's no state safety net. Always verify your E&S carrier's AM Best rating (A- or better recommended) and financial stability before binding coverage.
TWIA: The Insurer of Last Resort
The Texas Windstorm Insurance Association provides wind and hail coverage for properties in 14 first-tier coastal counties (plus designated portions of Harris County) that can't obtain private wind coverage. Key 2026 developments:
- TWIA exposure surpassed $135 billion in total insured value — up 12% from 2024, creating solvency concerns
- Rate increase of 10% approved by TDI for 2026 commercial policies, effective for new and renewal policies
- WPI-8 inspection requirements tightened: Properties must pass a Texas Department of Insurance windstorm inspection (WPI-8 certificate) to qualify. Failure = no TWIA coverage.
- Maximum commercial coverage remains $4.4 million per building — inadequate for larger multifamily complexes, requiring layered coverage with private wind carriers
TWIA currently insures over 250,000 policies with $135 billion in coastal wind exposure. The association maintains a Catastrophe Reserve Trust Fund of approximately $2.5 billion — enough to cover a mid-range hurricane but potentially insufficient for a major direct hit on Houston or Corpus Christi, which could generate $15–25 billion in wind claims alone.
What Changed for Multifamily Owners Specifically
Commercial multifamily properties face a unique set of post-hurricane challenges that single-family and small commercial owners don't encounter:
1. Named Storm Deductibles Are Higher
Pre-2025, many Texas multifamily policies carried 2% named storm deductibles. In 2026, carriers are pushing for 3–5% on coastal properties. For a $10 million insured building, that's the difference between a $200,000 and $500,000 out-of-pocket hit before insurance pays.
2. Ordinance or Law Coverage Is Critical
Hurricane-damaged buildings often trigger local building code upgrades during repair. Without Ordinance or Law coverage (Coverage A: demolition, B: increased cost of construction, C: undamaged portion), you're paying for code upgrades out of pocket. Post-2025, carriers are more willing to include this endorsement but at 15–25% higher sub-limits.
3. Business Income / Loss of Rents Extended Wait Periods
After large-scale hurricane events, repair timelines stretch dramatically due to contractor shortages. Properties damaged in Hurricane Mariana are reporting 6–12 month repair timelines — well beyond the 72-hour waiting period in most policies. Ensure your Business Income limit covers at least 12 months of gross rental income.
4. Flood Insurance Gaps Exposed
Tropical Storm Xavier's flooding revealed that many commercial properties — even those outside FEMA's Special Flood Hazard Areas — lacked adequate flood coverage. Key issues:
- NFIP commercial limits cap at $500,000 for building and $500,000 for contents — far below replacement cost for most multifamily complexes
- Private flood markets offer higher limits ($5–25 million) but premiums run $8,000–$25,000 per building for moderate-risk locations
- FEMA's Risk Rating 2.0 has repriced many previously low-cost zones upward by 200–400%
Coastal vs. Inland: Two Different Insurance Markets
Texas's commercial property insurance market has effectively split into two distinct markets, with different carriers, pricing dynamics, and risk profiles.
| Factor | Coastal Texas | Inland Texas |
|---|---|---|
| Primary risk | Hurricane wind + storm surge | Hail + severe convective storms |
| Rate trend (2026) | +12–30% | +3–10% |
| Carrier options | 3–5 carriers (mostly E&S) | 8–15+ carriers (mostly admitted) |
| Wind deductible | 3–5% named storm | 1–2% wind/hail |
| Per-unit premium | $1,400–$2,800 | $800–$1,400 |
| TWIA needed? | Often yes (14 coastal counties) | No |
| Flood coverage | Essential; NFIP + private excess | Recommended but not always required |
How to Prepare for the 2026 Hurricane Season (and Your Next Renewal)
1. Start Your Renewal 120–150 Days Early
In a hard market, last-minute renewals get the worst terms. Begin the marketing process 4–5 months before expiration to allow time for multiple carrier submissions, inspections, and negotiation. For policies renewing June–November (peak hurricane season), this is especially critical — carriers restrict new business as the season approaches.
2. Invest in Wind Mitigation (It Pays for Itself)
Wind-mitigation improvements deliver the highest ROI in the current market — both in premium savings and claim prevention:
- Impact-resistant roofing (Class 4 shingles or metal): 10–28% premium credits; cost $8–15/sq ft installed
- Hurricane straps/clips: 5–15% credits; cost $5–$15 per connection point
- Opening protection (impact windows or shutters): 5–10% credits; cost $25–$60/sq ft for impact windows
- Secondary water barrier (SWR): Required for TWIA in some areas; 3–8% additional credit
Source: Insurance Institute for Business & Home Safety (IBHS) Fortified Standards; TWIA mitigation credit schedule.
A 60-unit coastal multifamily complex paying $120,000/year in property insurance invests $45,000 in roof clips and opening protection. The resulting 15–20% premium credit saves $18,000–$24,000 annually — a payback period of under 2.5 years, plus reduced deductible exposure in the next storm.
3. Document Everything About Your Property
In a tight market, underwriters want detailed information upfront. Prepare a property submission package that includes:
- Recent roof inspection reports with estimated remaining useful life
- Photos of wind-mitigation features (straps, shutters, roof type)
- Updated Statement of Values (SOV) with accurate replacement costs — not market value
- 5-year claims history (CLUE report or equivalent)
- Plumbing, electrical, and HVAC upgrade history
- WPI-8 certificate (if in TWIA territory)
4. Consider Higher Deductibles to Access Better Carriers
If your only options are TWIA or expensive E&S carriers, increasing your wind/hail deductible from 2% to 5% can open doors to better-rated carriers willing to write the risk. On a $10 million building, that's an additional $300,000 in self-insured risk — but it could save $15,000–$30,000/year in premium and get you an A-rated carrier instead of a marginal one.
5. Build a Relationship with an Independent Agent
Independent agents access both admitted and surplus lines carriers — critical in the current environment where a single carrier may not cover your entire portfolio. Look for:
- Agents with surplus lines authority who can directly access E&S markets
- Specialization in Texas commercial property / multifamily
- Relationships with A-rated carriers (AM Best A- or better)
- Experience navigating TWIA, layered wind programs, and parametric options
6. Explore Emerging Coverage Options
- Parametric wind insurance: Pays a fixed amount based on wind speed at your location — no adjuster, no claims process, payment within days. Growing market in Texas for deductible buybacks.
- Captive insurance programs: For larger portfolios (200+ units), forming or joining a group captive can reduce long-term costs by 15–30% while retaining underwriting profit.
- Resilience bonds: Some carriers now offer premium credits for properties that invest in resilience — tying insurance savings directly to mitigation investment.
The Bigger Picture: Is Texas Insurance Getting Worse or Stabilizing?
The outlook depends on where you sit — geographically and financially.
Signs of Stabilization
- Reinsurance capacity has improved: The January 2026 reinsurance renewals saw increased capacity and moderating price increases (5–10% vs. 15–25% in 2024), which should trickle down to primary market pricing by mid-2026
- New E&S capital entering Texas: Lloyd's syndicates and Bermuda-domiciled carriers are attracted by the premium rates, adding competition
- Inland markets stabilizing: DFW, Austin, and San Antonio commercial property rates are approaching equilibrium after 4+ years of hardening
Reasons for Continued Concern
- Climate models project increasing Gulf Coast storm intensity — warmer Gulf waters fuel stronger hurricanes (NOAA Climate.gov)
- Replacement cost inflation has driven insured values up 20–35% since 2020, increasing carrier exposure even without more storms
- Texas population growth continues pushing development into coastal and flood-prone areas, concentrating more insured value in harm's way
- TWIA solvency concerns: A major direct hit on Houston could exhaust TWIA's reserves and trigger policyholder surcharges statewide
Coastal Texas commercial property insurance is unlikely to get cheaper in the near term. The most effective strategy is controlling what you can control: wind mitigation, accurate valuations, clean claims history, early renewals, and working with agents who access the full market. Inland Texas owners are in a better position but should still expect moderate annual increases.
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