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A standard US homeowners policy covers many disaster-related perils, fire (including wildfire), wind, hail, and lightning among them, but it excludes the two most expensive ones: flood and earthquake. Both of those need separate coverage. Wildfire is technically covered, but heavy exposure can make a policy hard to obtain or keep, which is its own kind of risk. Your area's hazard ratings feed into how insurers price you, so knowing which hazards rate high for your address tells you where to check coverage before you commit. This is general guidance; your actual policy governs.
The single most useful thing to understand about disaster insurance is that "homeowners insurance" is not one product that covers everything bad. It is a specific policy with named perils and hard exclusions, and the exclusions are exactly the hazards people most fear. Here is how it breaks down.
Most standard policies (commonly the HO-3 form) cover damage from a list of perils that includes fire and wildfire, windstorms, hail, lightning, and, in many cases, the wind side of hurricanes and tornadoes. So for several major hazards, you are covered by the base policy, though coastal areas may carry separate wind or hurricane deductibles, and some high-wind regions require windstorm coverage through a separate pool.
Two big hazards are carved out of essentially every standard policy:
If your report rates either of these Relatively High or Very High and you do not have a separate policy, that is a real, uninsured gap. See wildfire vs flood vs earthquake risk for how these three compare.
Wildfire is covered under the fire peril, so the problem is not a coverage gap, it is availability. In high-risk areas, insurers have pulled back: declining new applications, non-renewing existing policies, or raising premiums steeply. Owners in those areas may end up relying on a state FAIR plan, the insurer of last resort, which can cost more and cover less. So for wildfire, the question to ask is not "am I covered" but "can I get and keep affordable coverage on this home," and it is worth confirming before you buy, not after.
| Hazard | Standard policy | What to arrange |
|---|---|---|
| Fire / wildfire | Covered | Confirm availability and renewal in high-risk areas |
| Wind, hail, lightning | Covered (may have separate wind deductible) | Check hurricane/windstorm deductible on the coast |
| Hurricane / tornado | Wind covered; flooding from them is not | Add flood coverage for storm surge and rain flooding |
| Flood | Excluded | Separate NFIP or private flood policy (waiting period applies) |
| Earthquake | Excluded | Standalone policy or endorsement (percentage deductible) |
Insurers price on their own catastrophe models, not directly on FEMA's National Risk Index, so a high NRI rating does not translate into a specific premium. But they move in the same direction: the hazards that drive up your report's ratings are the same ones that drive up premiums and tighten availability. That makes the NRI a useful early-warning tool. Remember what it measures, though, it is an expected annual loss index, not a probability, so use it to decide which coverage questions to ask, then get real quotes for the answer.
Before you buy or move: pull the address report, note any hazard rated Relatively High or Very High, and get an actual insurance quote that covers those specific hazards, including separate flood and earthquake policies where relevant. A quote in hand is worth more than any estimate, and it can be a fair basis to renegotiate.
For a full pre-purchase routine, see the relocation checklist, and to read your ratings correctly, understanding your hazard ratings.
Insurance details here are general and can vary by state, insurer, and policy form. This is not a coverage determination or insurance advice; confirm with a licensed agent. Reviewed 1 July 2026.