Florida Home Insurance: Should You Pay Cash or Risk Getting Burned?
Florida’s home insurance market has become one of the most volatile in the country, and South Florida homeowners are feeling the pressure more than anyone. Between rising premiums, carriers pulling out of the state, and policies being dropped without warning, many homeowners are left wondering whether carrying insurance is even worth it — or whether paying cash for a home outright is the smarter play. In this video, Bigfoot Windows & Roofing breaks down the real talk behind Florida’s insurance crisis and what it actually means for your home, your wallet, and your long-term financial protection.
Key Takeaways From This Video
- Florida’s insurance market is unlike any other state — carriers have exited in large numbers, leaving homeowners with fewer options and higher costs.
- Your home’s condition directly affects your insurability — older roofs, single-pane windows, and outdated openings are red flags for underwriters.
- Impact windows and doors can lower your insurance premiums — wind mitigation credits are real, and many South Florida homeowners see meaningful savings after upgrading their openings.
- Paying cash eliminates the lender’s insurance requirement — but it does not eliminate your financial exposure to storm damage, theft, or liability.
- Hardening your home is the most controllable variable — you cannot control the insurance market, but you can make your home less risky to insure.
- Citizens Insurance has coverage caps and assessments — understanding the limits of Florida’s insurer of last resort matters before you assume you’re fully covered.
- The best defense is a fortified home — impact-rated openings, a newer roof, and proper documentation put you in the best position regardless of who your carrier is.
What This Means for South Florida Homeowners
If you own a home in Miami-Dade, Broward, or Palm Beach County, the insurance conversation is not hypothetical — it’s an annual financial stress test. Premiums in South Florida consistently rank among the highest in the nation, and the window for qualifying for competitive rates is narrowing every year.
What this video makes clear is that the homeowners who are getting squeezed the hardest are the ones whose homes present the most risk on paper. Older windows, hollow-core doors, and aging roofs are not just aesthetic issues — they are underwriting liabilities. Insurers price risk, and a home with single-pane windows in a Category 4 corridor is a different animal than a home with impact-rated openings and a wind mitigation report on file.
The practical takeaway for most South Florida homeowners is this: upgrading to impact windows in Florida is one of the few home improvements that can simultaneously increase your property value, reduce your insurance premiums, and protect your family during a storm. That combination is rare, and it’s why so many homeowners in this market are prioritizing their openings above other upgrades.
Whether you’re trying to keep your current carrier happy, qualify for a new policy, or simply reduce your annual premium burden, hardening your home’s envelope is the most actionable step available to you right now. Insurance companies reward it. Mortgage lenders notice it. And when a storm comes through, you’ll be glad you did it.
If you have questions about what qualifies for wind mitigation credits or want to understand what an impact window upgrade would look like for your specific home, the team at Bigfoot Windows & Roofing is here to walk you through it — no pressure, no guesswork.
Get a Free Estimate and Take Control of Your Insurance Costs
Don’t wait for your carrier to drop you or your premium to double again. Talk to the South Florida impact window experts at Bigfoot Windows & Roofing. We’ll assess your home’s openings, explain your wind mitigation options, and give you a straight answer on what an upgrade would cost and what it could save you.
Call us at 786-886-2088 or schedule your free estimate online. No obligation — just honest answers from a team that knows South Florida homes.