Oklahoma Home Insurance (2026): $234/mo NAIC baseline, current filings 10-25% higher
Oklahoma home insurance averages $234/mo per NAIC 2023 published data — the most recent state-aggregate baseline. Current carrier-filed rates typically run 10-25% above this baseline due to post-2023 loss-cost inflation.
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Why rates in Oklahoma look the way they do
Oklahoma’s homeowners insurance ($2,810/yr NAIC 2023) is the most expensive in the country, beating Florida’s $2,385/yr — driven entirely by hailstorm and tornado risk. Auto rates ($1,393/yr) are middle-of-pack.
Oklahoma sits in the heart of Tornado Alley, and its homeowners insurance market is the most expensive in the country per NAIC 2023 ($2,810/yr) — beating Florida despite no hurricane exposure.
A few state-specific dynamics worth knowing:
- Tornado Alley and severe-hail exposure make OK the highest home-insurance state by NAIC data.
- Many policies require separate wind/hail deductibles set as a percentage of dwelling value.
Best Oklahoma home insurance by driver profile
The “best” home carrier in Oklahoma depends on your specific profile. Below is how we route the top-rated carriers based on profile signals, using 0 recent filings + the 2023 NAIC baseline.
Best for high-value homes ($750K+) in Oklahoma: Chubb and PURE specialize in high-net-worth coverage. Standard carriers cap dwelling coverage well below the replacement cost on these properties.
Best for standard single-family homes in Oklahoma: State Farm files among the most competitive baseline rates in the standard market.
Best for older homes / specialty risks in Oklahoma: Travelers and Liberty Mutual will underwrite properties that more conservative carriers decline.
Oklahoma home insurance — what affects your rate
Oklahoma sits in the heart of Tornado Alley, and its homeowners insurance market is the most expensive in the country per NAIC 2023 ($2,810/yr) — beating Florida despite no hurricane exposure.
Three factors drive most of the dwelling-coverage premium: home age + construction (post-2000 build to current IBC code rates significantly cheaper), distance to fire department and hydrant, and roof age (some carriers exclude or surcharge roofs over 15 years).
Frequently asked: Oklahoma home insurance
How much does home insurance cost in Oklahoma?
The 2023 NAIC published average is $2,810/year (about $234/mo). Recent carrier filings suggest current rates run 10-25% above this baseline; the table above shows the actual filed numbers. Your specific quote depends on your ZIP, age, vehicle, driving record, and credit (where credit-based scoring is permitted).
Why are Oklahoma home insurance rates high?
Oklahoma sits in the heart of Tornado Alley, and its homeowners insurance market is the most expensive in the country per NAIC 2023 ($2,810/yr) — beating Florida despite no hurricane exposure.
How can I lower my Oklahoma home insurance bill?
The single biggest lever is comparing quotes across carriers — rate differences for the same profile commonly run 30-50%. The table above shows where carriers currently file baseline rates; your actual quote may rank carriers differently. Use Sage to get personalized quotes in 60 seconds: Start Sage
How PolicyChat sources this data
PolicyChat Rate Authority aggregates three public + licensed sources, with per-record provenance. Every row above can be traced to its source filing or partner-feed quote.
- State Department of Insurance / SERFF filings — public rate filings. PolicyChat Rate Authority pulls daily; filings appear within days of carrier submission.
- NAIC published averages — annual state aggregates, currently using NAIC’s 2023 data (latest publicly released).
- Licensed partner feeds (EverQuote, LendingTree) — real-time per-profile quotes pulled when a user walks through Sage.
Methodology: /methodology/rate-authority/
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