Multi-Family and Apartment Investing
Market News & Data
General Info
Real Estate Strategies

Landlording & Rental Properties
Real Estate Professionals
Financial, Tax, & Legal


Real Estate Classifieds
Reviews & Feedback
Updated 6 months ago on . Most recent reply

Underwriting for 3% insurance increase - is this a joke?
Hi BP family - hope you're well!
Wanted to pose this as a question while also ranting a little bit.
Curious to know if I'm the only one feeling strongly about this?
Some Background:
I'm very entrenched with multifamily syndication space, and I've noticed deal flow pick up since start of H2 2024. I'm on a LOT of people's email lists, and I see multiple investment offerings every day of the week. I've syndicated multifamily offerings myself, and I have deep seated opinions in underwriting and asset management.
There's one thing I seems to be consistent across the industry that I vehemently disagree with, and that's the expense escalator(YOY increases) for insurance.
I STILL see people underwriting for 3% YOY insurance increases. It's like the world hasn't changed dramatically in 5 years.
Despite the fact that some markets were faced with 200% YOY increases this/last year, there doesn't seem to be a justification for this UW assumption. Hell - even our midwest property with no natural disasters was a 20% increase. IMO the insurance industry will be in catch up mode until natural disasters slow down (IF they slow down?). Until then, I'm anticipating consistent double digit increases in insurance YOY.
My Thoughts:
I personally think insurance expense escalators should have 5-10%(as an avg) expense escalators for the foreseeable future.
Am I alone in feeling this way?
Disclaimers:
Let's agree to disagree to that everyone has "conservative" underwriting. 😂
Not every deal is truly a good deal.
Thank you,
TB
Most Popular Reply

- Cincinnati, OH
- 3,438
- Votes |
- 3,769
- Posts
@Tommy Brant, regarding your last comment about conservative underwriting, not only is that an entirely overused statement, but also, do you think you will ever hear any syndicator say "we underwrite very aggressively"? But beyond that fact, I have posed many times over "what is conservative"? Is 5% rent growth conservative? Over last 4 yrs, Orlando has seen about 10% per year average rent increases, even counting the near 5% decline in 2024.
But to your point, I could make a case either way. While I overall agree with you, there is a case to be made that premiums will start to normalize:
Namely, major insurers pulling out of the high risk areas like FL and CA are limiting their catastrophic events. At the same time, they "caught up" the premiums all at once for everyone in the last year or two. The combined effect is that premium increases will normalize going forward.
I have a feeling if I had an investor on the phone that was reading headlines about insurance premium spikes, the above would satisfy them. Am I right? Maybe. But that is the key with investing, you need to have your educated guess of future events, place your bet, and hope you are right.