Extreme event modeling firm AIR Worldwide has updated its insured loss estimates for Hurricane Ida to include the impact of inland flooding across the storm’s entire track, including the Northeast. AIR now estimates that insured losses from Ida will range from $20 billion to $30 billion. The firm estimated wind and storm-surge losses between $17 billion and $25 billion, and private-market insured losses from inland flooding between $2.5 billion and $5 billion.
The estimate includes losses to onshore residential, commercial and industrial properties and automobiles for their building, contents and time element coverage, along with estimated insurance take-up rates for wind and flood across the entirety of the hurricane’s path, including the flooding that occurred in the Northeast.
The estimate does not include any estimated losses from the National Flood Insurance Program or any losses from offshore assets. The estimate also reflects an adjustment to account for the increased cost of materials and other increased repair costs in the current construction market, AIR said.
Ida made two landfalls in Louisiana on Aug. 29 as a Category 4 hurricane with maximum sustained wind speeds up to 150 miles per hour. The remnants of the storm inundated the Northeast, causing flooding damage across the region. Flooding was reported from Pennsylvania to Massachusetts. New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania bore the brunt of the impact, AIR reported.
Several states also reported damage due to hurricane-induced tornadoes, and some areas in the northeastern states also reported damage resulting from trees falling on homes.
AIR’s insured loss estimates include:
AIR’s estimates do not include: