State-owned Citizens Property Insurance Corp. is recommending a 2.6% statewide rate decrease for its personal lines accounts in 2026.
Most South Florida homeowners would see far larger decreases while average rates are projected to increase in several Central Florida counties, including Orange, Osceola, Lake and Brevard.
During its quarterly meeting on Wednesday, the company’s Board of Governors attributed the rate decreases to continued success of reforms enacted in 2022 and 2023 and resulting efforts to transfer Citizens policies to private-market insurers.
The insurer of last resort’s policy count has decreased sharply in recent years, from about 1.4 million in September 2023 to 439,079 in November.
Related Articles
Resumption of Citizens Insurance alternative dispute hearings ordered
Homeowner insurance cost hikes grind to near stop in September, latest data shows
Are lower insurance rates reducing homeowners’ costs? We shopped four policies to find out
The board was scheduled to vote on the rate recommendations later on Wednesday. They still must be approved by the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation.
Personal lines accounts include multi-peril and dwelling/fire coverage of owner-occupied single-family homes, condo units, and mobile homes. It also includes wind-only hurricane coverage.
Across the state, a projected 463,096 policyholders would save an average premium savings of $359 compared to 2025.
The company projects that 228,961 personal lines policyholders in South Florida’s tricounty region would see rates decreased by more than 11%.
In Broward County, 68,662 policyholders would see rates fall by 12.6%, resulting in an average premium savings of $421.
In Palm Beach County, 54,369 policyholders would see rates decreased by 11.7%, resulting in average savings of $423.
In Miami-Dade County, 105,930 policyholders would see rates decline by 13%. They would save $433 on average.
Overall rate increases are projected for four Central Florida counties.
Personal lines customers in Orange County would see rates increase by an average 1.8%. Osceola County policyholders would see a 5.2% hike, while Lake County customers would see rates climb an average of 4.1%. In Brevard County, rates would jump 6.5%.
Customers in Polk County would see an average decrease of 0.7% and rates for Seminole County policyholders would decline by an average of 4.1%.
This is a developing story, so check back for updates. Click here to have breaking news alerts sent directly to your inbox.
Ron Hurtibise covers business and consumer issues for the South Florida Sun Sentinel. He can be reached by phone at 954-356-4071 or by email at rhurtibise@sunsentinel.com.

