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Kansas homeowners insurance cost

Midwest region · NAIC 2022 HO-3 average · rank #21 of 51

The average annual homeowners insurance premium in Kansas is about $1,583 for the standard HO-3 policy form (NAIC 2022 data, the latest available) — about 1% above the national average of $1,569. Kansas ranks #21 of 51 states and DC (1 = most expensive), making it near average on home-insurance cost, close to the national average. The main local cost drivers are Tornado Alley, hail, severe convective storms. This is a countrywide average, not a quote for your home.

Source: NAIC Homeowners Insurance Report (2022 data, latest available). Data as of June 2026.

Kansas home insurance at a glance

FigureKansas
Average annual HO-3 premium$1,583
National average (HO-3)$1,569
vs national average1% (about 1% above the national average)
State rank (1 = most expensive of 51)#21
Cost bandNear average (close to the national average)
RegionMidwest

Source: NAIC Homeowners Insurance Report (2022 data, latest available). Data as of June 2026.

What drives home insurance cost in Kansas

A homeowners premium mostly reflects how likely and how expensive a claim is. In Kansas, the main factors behind the $1,583 average are:

On top of these location factors, your own premium swings with your home's rebuilding cost (Coverage A), roof age and material, deductible, claims history and, in most states, your insurance credit score. See our premium drivers guide for how each one moves the price.

Estimated Kansas premium by dwelling coverage

A rough idea of how the Kansas average scales with the amount of dwelling (Coverage A) you carry. These are illustrative estimates from the state average scaled by a coverage factor — not quotes.

Dwelling coverage (Coverage A)Estimated annual premium
$200,000 to $299,999$1,583
$300,000 to $399,999$2,026
$400,000 to $499,999$2,469
$500,000 and over$3,166

Source: Estimated from the NAIC 2022 Kansas average and a coverage-scaling factor. Data as of June 2026.

For a tailored figure use the premium estimator. The scaling factors are an approximation documented on the methodology page, not published NAIC band data.

How Kansas compares with similar states

Kansas and the states with the closest average premium. Source: NAIC 2022.
StateAvg HO-3 / yrvs national
Kansas (this state)$1,5831%
South Carolina$1,5710%
Wyoming$1,5962%
North Carolina$1,6213%
New York$1,6284%
Montana$1,6394%

Frequently asked questions

How much is homeowners insurance in Kansas?

The average annual homeowners (HO-3) premium in Kansas is about $1,583, about 1% above the national average of $1,569 (NAIC 2022 data, the latest available). It ranks #21 of 51 states and DC, where 1 is the most expensive. This is a countrywide average, not a quote for your home.

Why is home insurance priced the way it is in Kansas?

Kansas's premiums are shaped mainly by Tornado Alley, hail, severe convective storms. Catastrophe exposure (wind, hail, wildfire), rebuilding costs and claims history are the biggest levers on a homeowners premium. Kansas is near average versus the national average, close to the national average.

Is Kansas home insurance going up?

Yes, like most of the country. NAIC's latest report shows the national HO-3 average rose about 11.26% in 2022 year-over-year, driven by reconstruction-cost inflation and rising catastrophe losses. 2022 is the latest published data year, so current Kansas premiums are likely higher than the figure shown. Verify with insurers.

Is the $1,583 figure a quote?

No. $1,583 is the NAIC 2022 countrywide average HO-3 premium for Kansas - an average across all homes and insurers, not a quote for your property. Your actual premium depends on your home's value, age, construction, roof, deductible, claims history, credit and insurer. Always get real quotes.

Keep exploring

YMYL note. The $1,583 figure is the NAIC 2022 countrywide average for Kansas - general information, not a quote. Homeowners insurance protects one of your largest assets; actual premiums vary widely by home and insurer. Always get real quotes from licensed insurers and verify coverage with your state insurance department.

Last updated: 2026-06-20