Personalized monthly and annual rate estimate based on state, coverage amount, deductible, credit, and property type.
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Renters insurance is one of the most underutilized financial products in America β only about 57% of renters have it, despite average monthly costs of $15β$30. The barriers are almost entirely informational: most renters don't know how much it costs, what it covers, or how much coverage they actually need.
This calculator estimates your monthly premium based on state risk factors, your personal property value, liability coverage level, deductible choice, credit profile, and whether you qualify for bundling discounts.
Renters insurance is both one of the cheapest and most underutilized insurance products available. At $15β$30 per month, it provides protection that would cost thousands of dollars out of pocket if a single covered event occurred.
| Coverage Level | Monthly Premium | Annual Premium | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Minimal ($10K property / $100K liability) | $8β$12 | $96β$144 | Studio with few belongings |
| Basic ($20K / $100K) | $12β$18 | $144β$216 | 1BR apartment |
| Standard ($30K / $300K) | $15β$25 | $180β$300 | 1β2BR standard |
| Enhanced ($50K / $300K) | $20β$35 | $240β$420 | 2β3BR or higher-value items |
| Comprehensive ($75K / $500K) | $28β$50 | $336β$600 | High-value belongings |
Most renters dramatically underestimate their belongings. A practical inventory: laptop ($1,500) + smartphone ($1,000) + TV ($800) + furniture ($8,000) + clothing ($4,000) + kitchen appliances ($2,000) + miscellaneous electronics and items ($3,000) = $20,300 for a minimal 1-bedroom setup. Add jewelry, specialized equipment, musical instruments, or a second laptop and $30,000β$50,000 is a realistic target for most furnished apartments.
Standard renters insurance excludes: flood damage (requires a separate NFIP or private flood policy), earthquake damage (separate endorsement or policy), your roommate's belongings (they need their own policy), pest damage (bed bugs, rodents), and high-value items above scheduled limits β typically $1,500 for jewelry and $2,500 for electronics. High-value items require scheduled endorsements that add $10β$50/year per item.
Renters insurance premiums are actuarially determined by a combination of geographic risk factors, coverage limits, deductible levels, credit score, and bundling discounts. While individual insurers use proprietary rating models, the NAIC (National Association of Insurance Commissioners) publishes state-level average premium data that reveals the underlying cost structure. This calculator applies that framework to produce a personalized premium estimate.
State base rates reflect the actuarial risk of insured losses in that state, incorporating weather catastrophe risk (hurricanes, tornadoes, hail), crime rates, construction costs (which determine rebuild costs), and regulatory environment. The state rates in this calculator are calibrated to NAIC 2024 state average premium data for renters insurance:
| State Risk Category | Annual Base Rate Range | Primary Risk Factors |
|---|---|---|
| Low risk states (UT, HI, ND, SD, WY) | $100β$140/year | Low natural catastrophe risk, lower crime rates, lower construction costs |
| Below average (PA, WI, VT, NH) | $140β$175/year | Moderate risk profile; limited hurricane/tornado exposure |
| National average | $180/year | NAIC national average for standard coverage (2024 data) |
| Above average (TX, FL, GA, SC) | $200β$280/year | Hurricane exposure, tornado corridor, above-average theft rates |
| High risk (LA, MS, OK, KS) | $280β$380/year | Highest catastrophe risk; tornado alley, hurricane coast, flooding exposure |
Personal property coverage is the most consumer-visible pricing variable. Premiums scale sub-linearly with coverage amount β doubling coverage does not double the premium, because the probability of a total-loss claim (requiring full policy limits) is low. The coverage multipliers used here are derived from filed rating plans:
| Coverage Amount | Premium Multiplier |
|---|---|
| $10,000 (minimal) | 0.65Γ |
| $20,000 (low) | 0.80Γ |
| $30,000 (standard) | 1.0Γ (baseline) |
| $50,000 (moderate-high) | 1.20Γ |
| $75,000 (high) | 1.40Γ |
| $100,000 (maximum) | 1.60Γ |
Raising the deductible reduces the insurer's expected loss frequency (fewer small claims are filed when the deductible is high). Published rate filings show consistent discount patterns by deductible level:
| Deductible | Premium Effect |
|---|---|
| $250 | +15% vs baseline $500 |
| $500 (standard) | Baseline |
| $1,000 | β15% vs baseline |
| $2,500 | β30% vs baseline |
Most states permit insurers to use credit-based insurance scores (CBIS) as a rating factor. Research by the FTC and NAIC has consistently shown that credit scores are predictive of insurance loss frequency. CBIS differs from lending credit scores β it weights payment history and credit utilization more heavily than total credit history. Credit adjustment factors in this calculator reflect average actuarial credit tier relativities from NAIC data:
| Credit Score Tier | Multiplier |
|---|---|
| Excellent (750+) | 0.80Γ |
| Good (700β749) | 0.90Γ |
| Fair (650β699) | 1.0Γ (baseline) |
| Poor (below 650) | 1.25Γ |
| No credit history | 1.15Γ |
NAIC Homeowners Insurance Report (2024), which includes renters insurance data; Insurance Information Institute (III) premium benchmarks; published rate filings from top-10 US renters insurance carriers; Consumer Reports renters insurance pricing analysis (2024β2025).