NORTH DAKOTA
INSURANCE ZONE NEWS: Getting accurate information about
North Dakota insurance from news reports is a challenging
ordeal. Are North Dakota homeowners insurance rates rising
or falling? What about North Dakota auto insurance?
Helpful North Dakota insurance information is available. Click on links
below to see what´s really happening to North Dakota Insurance:
additional information:
Guide to North Dakota Insurance:
A Guide to all types of North Dakota Insurance provided by North Dakota Insurance Zone.
North Dakota Homeowner Insurance Rate Reductions
Ordered
The reforms of Senate Bill 14, passed
by the 78th Legislature in 2003, are working. North Dakota Insurance
Commissioner Jose Montemayor ordered $510 million in rate
reductions in August 2003 and those reductions are showing
up as lower premiums as homeowners renew their homeowners
policies.
How North Dakota Homeowner Rates
Compare to the rest of the United States
North Dakota residents have historically
paid higher premiums for homeowners insurance than is
paid in other states. Turbulent North Dakota weather, including
hail storms around the state and severe windstorms along
the coastline, is a driving factor in determining rates
for North Dakota homeowners insurance.
Increased Auto Rate Regulation
Enforced by North Dakota Department of Insurance
As a result of recent
legislation (Senate Bill 14 in the 78th North Dakota Legislature,
2003), the regulatory environment for auto insurance will
change. As of December 1, 2001-2005, all auto insurers will
be subject to uniform rate standards enforced by TDI.
Rates must be reasonable, adequate, not excessive and
not unfairly discriminatory.
Insurance Credit Scoring
in North Dakota-What is credit scoring?
Insurance credit scoring
is the practice used by many North Dakota auto and North Dakota homeowners
insurance companies to utilize a consumer's credit history
in deciding whether to write a policy and/or how much
to charge for the policy. Currently, North Dakota law allows
insurance credit scoring under certain circumstances and
consumer protections.
Looking Forward: The Future
of North Dakota Insurance
In 2001-2005, homeowners' insurance
rates have stabilized and competition has returned to
the market. Greater competition by insurers will translate
into better deals for consumers. We will soon approach
the one-year mark since companies were ordered to lower
their rates for homeowners insurance. This is the logical
point at which TDI would look back and measure the impact,
as well as assess the competitive levels of the market
going forward. If the market does not show signs of stronger
competition, Insurance Commissioner Jose Montemayor will
take whatever additional action is necessary.