
Map Shows Where Natural Disasters Threaten US Homeowners
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
Homeowners in Louisiana are expected to face the highest financial losses from severe weather and natural hazards in the entire nation in an average year, according to a new study by Insurify, at an estimated annual loss of $547 per person.
That is over $100 more than the projected annual cost faced by the second-most at-risk homeowners in the country, Floridians, who are expected to shoulder a yearly loss of $416 in 2025.
It is a grim prospect for the two states navigating a hurricane season that forecasters say is very likely to be above average, potentially delivering 13-19 storms, six to 10 hurricanes, and three to five major hurricanes.
Where Homeowners Stand to Lose the Most
Louisiana is the state where homeowners stand to lose the most from natural disasters, based on financial losses per capita. The state, which faces threats of flooding, tornadoes, and hurricanes, has expected annual losses of $2.5 billion each year, according to Insurify's analysis, which translates to $547 per resident—the highest rate in the country.
The state has been hit by eight hurricanes, the most financially costly type of natural disaster, since the beginning of 2020, according to data from the National Centers for Environmental Information.
Hurricanes account for $1.4 billion of the state's expected annual losses in an average year, according to Insurify, followed by river flooding, at $691 million. That includes approximately $99 million in expected losses from river flooding in Lafayette County alone.
Louisiana was followed in the list of the top 10 states with the highest annual cost of natural disasters per person by Florida ($413), South Carolina ($413), South Dakota ($389), California ($385), North Dakota ($356), Oregon ($337), Mississippi ($325), Texas ($277) and Washington ($277).
Florida faces a 35 percent chance of being hit by a major hurricane this year, according to Insurify, which means that homeowners should brace themselves for storm wind-related damage and flooding, which is not included in the standard home insurance policy.
South Carolina, the state where homeowners face the third-highest financial losses from extreme weather in the country, is also vulnerable to hurricanes. Last September, Hurricane Helene caused a total of $1.2 billion in insured losses in South Carolina, making the storm the costliest weather-related disaster in the state since Hugo hit in 1989, according to the South Carolina State Climatology Office.
When examining total financial losses, the list of the top 10 states with the highest annual expenses differs slightly. California tops the list with a projected total yearly loss of over $15 billion, followed by Florida and Texas, with losses exceeding $8 billion each, Louisiana with $2.5 billion, and North Carolina with $2.3 billion.
The Threat Of Rising Premiums
The report's findings also indicate that homeowners in Louisiana and Florida, who have faced a significant surge in home insurance premiums over the past few years, may experience new hikes and increased instability in the aftermath of potentially devastating extreme weather events.
The two hurricane-prone states already have the highest home insurance premiums in the country, according to Insurify, with Florida homeowners paying an average of $14,140 per year and Louisiana homeowners paying an average of $10,964 per year.
"Extreme weather is the main factor driving up home insurance costs," said Mallory Mooney, director of sales and service at Insurify, in the report. "That includes both recurring weather events like hail or high winds, and individual disasters like hurricanes or wildfires."
"Past years show that a particularly damaging hurricane season can lead to higher premiums," Julia Taliesin of Insurify told Newsweek.
The company projects that typical home insurance costs will rise by approximately 8 percent this year, with larger increases in hurricane-prone states such as Florida, Louisiana, and Texas.
"Tariffs could also increase costs to rebuild a home, which would raise insurance costs," Talieson said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Newsweek
26 minutes ago
- Newsweek
Worldwide Birth Rate Warning Issued for 2025
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. This year will bring "another significant decline of the birth rate" for an "overwhelming number of countries," new analysis shows. Birth Gauge, an open-source database that aggregates global fertility and population trends, analyzed the number of births across the world so far this year and concluded the decline will continue. Why It Matters Countries all over the world have long been struggling with their birth rates, which threatens to leave nations with aging populations—fewer working-age people supporting more elderly people. In June, the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) warned of a global birth rate crisis after surveying people in 14 countries. Some 14,000 people were questioned as part of the study, and one in five had not had or did not expect to have the number of children they wanted. Multiple governments and advocates have tried to intervene through policies. President Donald Trump's administration has made the issue one of its priorities, with the White House exploring the possibility of giving women a "baby bonus" of $5,000, according to an April New York Times report. But Birth Gauge's analysis seems to suggest measures such as this have not yet worked. What To Know The United States has a fertility rate (births per woman) of 1.58 so far in 2025—down from 1.59 last year, 1.60 in 2023, 1.64 in 2020 and 1.84 in 2015. There has been a -0.1 percentage change in the total number of births this year (1,461,364) compared with the same time last year (1,462,305). We are now halfway through 2025 and it's time for the monthly birth update. For the overwhelming number of countries that have provided data so far, 2025 will bring yet another significant decline of the birth rate. — Birth Gauge (@BirthGauge) July 2, 2025 Countries that have seen the steepest drop in the number of births between the first half of 2024 and the first half of 2025 include Lithuania (-12.8 percent), Latvia (-11.5 percent), Slovakia (-11.5 percent), Czechia (-10.9 percent) and Poland (-10.5 percent). Eastern Europe has battled low population growth rates for years now and is dealing with a "dual demographic challenge" with "very low birth rates and high emigration," Public health and policy expert Poonam Muttreja, who is the Executive Director of the Population Foundation of India, told Newsweek. This sets Eastern Europe apart from other places in the world that have seen large population increases because of immigration, despite still struggling with fertility rates, such as the United Kingdom, Austria and Sweden. A file photo shows a baby scale in a hospital in Berlin. A file photo shows a baby scale in a hospital in Berlin. AP These three nations have also seen a dip in their births this year, according to Birth Gauge, with the United Kingdom recording a fertility rate of 1.36, down from 1.41 last year, 1.43 in 2023, 1.51 in 2020 and 1.77 in 2015. Data for the total number of births in the United Kingdom were not available. Austria's fertility rate is down from 1.31 this time last year to 1.27 with a -.43 percent difference in total births. Sweden is down from 1.43 last year to 1.39 with a -3.0 percent difference in total births. Nordic countries are struggling with their birth rates despite generally being less affected by the 2008 financial crash and often offering generous public policies, including longer parental leave and subsidized childcare. This is certainly the case for Norway, with the United Nations International Children's Fund (UNICEF) ranking it among the top countries for family-friendly policies with 12 months of shared paid leave for birth and an additional year each afterward as well as government-subsidized kindergartens. However, Norway's fertility rate has dropped dramatically from 1.98 children per woman in 2009 to 1.44 children per woman in 2024, according to official figures. This is widely attributed to cultural changes, with Oslo's Birth Rate Committee citing the fact that fewer people are having their first child before age 30 and fewer people have more than two children. Young adults are more likely to live alone than before and couples are more likely to split up, the committee found, among several aspects such as a change in attitudes about parenting. And yet, Norway is one of the few countries analyzed by Birth Gauge that shows an increase in the fertility rate between last year and this year – 1.44 to 1.45, up from 1.40 in 2023, the lowest-ever recorded fertility rate in the country, but down from 1.48 in 2020 and 1.73 in 2015. Newsweek previously spoke to committee members and local experts to break down the situation in Norway, showing that "fertility is a complex issue that requires a multi-pronged approach," as Theodore Cosco, a research fellow at the Oxford Institute of Population Ageing, said. What People Are Saying This year's UNFPA report said: "Young people overwhelmingly report worries and uncertainty about their futures. Many expect to experience worse outcomes than their parents did. Their concerns about climate change, economic instability and rising global conflicts will be reflected in the choices they make about raising families." UNFPA Executive Director Dr. Natalia Kanem said: "Reproductive agency is more than just freedom from coercion or improved access to services, it is the full range of conditions that enable people to exercise their reproductive rights and ensure true choice, including gender equality, economic stability, decent health and confidence in the future." Vice President JD Vance said in January: "We failed a generation not only by permitting a culture of abortion on demand but also by neglecting to help young parents achieve the ingredients they need to lead a happy and meaningful life. "Our society has failed to recognize the obligation that one generation has to another as a core part of living in a society. So let me say very simply, I want more babies in the United States of America." What Happens Next Birth rate trends will continue to be monitored across the world as governments continue trying to curb the decline.


Newsweek
35 minutes ago
- Newsweek
What US Arms Export Review Means for Its Allies
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. The United States is reviewing the sending of military gear not just to Ukraine, but to countries across the world, the Pentagon has said, a fresh doubling down on the Trump administration's "America First" agenda, which appears to focus more on U.S. aid rather than lucrative arms deals. However, the move highlights the strain exerted even on the world's largest defense exporter, as demand for military hardware in key areas, such as air defense and artillery, far outstrips supply, analysts say. The U.S.'s vast military-industrial complex accounted for 43 percent of global arms exports between 2020 and 2024, the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) said in March. But with the global uptick in demand for equipment, "there's too little to go around," said Jacob Funk Kirkegaard, a senior fellow at the Belgian think tank, Bruegel. Photo-illustration by Newsweek/Getty/AP The Pentagon review is a prudent stock-take, and one a long time coming for certain types of missiles and munitions, said Ed Arnold, a senior research fellow at the Royal United Services Institute think tank. Yet it does pile pressure on countries actively at war in receipt of U.S. supplies, and could prompt swathes of Europe, which have not yet established their own production lines to pump out enough defense gear, to sit up a little straighter. "We can't give weapons to everybody all around the world," the Department of Defense's chief spokesperson, Sean Parnell, said on Wednesday. "We have to look out for America and defending our homeland," he told reporters. Ukraine Taken By Surprise Ukraine is the country most obviously impacted, and the Pentagon has not yet confirmed whether the U.S. has paused weapons shipments to other countries, according to The New York Times. Although Kyiv is no longer as reliant on the United States as it was during the early stages of the war with Russia, U.S. donations continue to be important. The U.S. has provided about $67 billion in military aid to Ukraine since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of its neighbor in February 2022, the State Department said in March. Officials on Tuesday confirmed that the U.S. was holding back deliveries of military supplies to Ukraine after reports indicated that an evaluation of American munitions stockpiles had raised concerns over shortages. Kyiv's Defense Ministry publicly said it had not been officially told by the U.S. that deliveries of military aid would be stopped, and had "requested a telephone conversation" with American officials. "We're always assessing our munitions and where we're sending them," Parnell said, adding that under the Biden administration, the U.S. was "giving away weapons and munitions without really thinking about how many we have." Parnell said that the Pentagon would not provide any updates on the quantity or types of military supplies to Ukraine, nor any timelines for delivery. The delayed weapons reportedly include rounds for 155 mm howitzers, more than 100 Hellfire missiles and precision-guided rounds known as GMLRS, as well as dozens of Patriot missiles. Air defense missiles, in particular the expensive interceptors for the vaunted U.S.-made Patriot systems, have always been at the top of Kyiv's wish list. Ukrainian officials and analysts told Newsweek on Wednesday they were above all concerned about supplies of Patriot missiles. While U.S. shelves are likely still brimming with equipment, the air defense missiles and artillery ammunition that have dominated aid packages will be running in shorter supply, said Pieter Wezeman, a senior researcher in SIPRI's arms transfers team. It is also a question of how full U.S. planners believe their shelves should be, Wezeman told Newsweek. There has always been an understanding that the U.S. is "thin" on Patriot supplies, former Pentagon official Jim Townsend told Newsweek on Wednesday. However, for Ukraine, there's "no alternative" against Russia's advanced ballistic missiles, Lesia Orobets, a former Ukrainian lawmaker deeply involved in Ukraine's air defense, told Newsweek. Observers say Ukraine must now turn to its own industry, further boosting its ability to produce equipment, as well as rely on European partners who have supported Kyiv for years. "Currently, Ukraine can compensate the lack of the U.S. supply by European sources," said Andrii Ziuz, a former chief executive of Ukraine's National Security and Defense Council and current head of technology at London-based company Prevail. Europe Facing 'Real Constraints' Europe itself is at a major evaluation point. The Pentagon's wording is ambiguous, and the review is unlikely to target the foreign military sales that keep America's industry afloat, experts say. However, the U.S. feeling the bite of shortages would not be a good sign for the rest of NATO. Countries on the continent have been major customers of U.S. weapons and platforms for decades. Patriot, and more importantly, its interceptor missiles, are in high demand in Europe as well, Arnold said. "This is going to put a real constraints on European air defense requirements," Arnold told Newsweek. Senior Trump officials had pushed for European NATO members and Canada to dedicate 5 percent of their GDP to defense, a target that had seemed entirely unrealistic until the alliance pledged to meet this threshold in the coming years at NATO's summit last week. Separately, the European Commission, the European Union's executive arm, announced in early March that it would mobilize €800 billion, or roughly $900 billion, in defense funding for member states under a plan dubbed "ReArm Europe." It's a "nearly historical re-armament," said Kirkegaard. The U.S. has also been quite clear that it expects Europe and Canada to continue purchasing American weapons, while still investing in their own defense. This was greeted with somewhat mixed reactions from Europe, although there is a broad consensus that U.S. exports to the continent will dip as Europe builds up its own industries. "It's very clear that the U.S. exports will go down very significantly," Kirkegaard said. However, expanding industrial capacity in Europe is still in the early stages and may be unable to meet demand within the timeframe when key capabilities, such as air defense, could be needed. NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte said last week that the alliance will invest in a "five-fold increase" in air defense capabilities, as well as "thousands more tanks and armoured vehicles" and millions of artillery rounds. "Europe and Ukraine needs to double—or triple down—not only on domestic production in Ukraine, but very much on improving air defense capability across Europe and in a way that is not dependent on the United States," Kirkegaard said. Israel as 'Top Priority' Patriot missiles, among other types of American-made equipment, are also very much sought after in Israel, particularly after waves of Iranian ballistic missile strikes during what has been termed the "12 day war" last month. Israel also utilizes other systems, such as the American Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) batteries, to intercept ballistic missiles. The U.S. is far more involved in Israel's air defense compared to Ukraine. U.S. troops have repeatedly been involved in shooting down Iranian missiles heading for Israel, and the Trump administration has been far more staunchly supportive of Israel compared to Ukraine. "It's very clear that Israel is the top priority for critical U.S. military supplies of high-end air defense," said Kirkegaard. Israel also has a very strong domestic industry, a major exporter in its own right. Israel's Defense Ministry said last month that it had increased its defense exports for a fourth consecutive year in 2024, with significant jumps in sales to Europe. There was "significant growth" in contracts signed off with European nations, which accounted for 54 percent of the deals closed last year, Israel said in early June. This figure stood at 35 percent in 2023, according to the Israeli government. Missiles, rockets and air defense systems accounted for almost half of all deals, a surge from 36 percent in the previous year, the defense ministry said. Yet Israel, too, needs to build up its stocks of ballistic missile interceptors, Kirkegaard said. "Everyone needs to produce more of these things because of the scale of the ballistic threats," he said. While Iran and Russia have fired high numbers of ballistic missiles at Israel and Ukraine, North Korea has sent its own ballistic missiles for battlefield use and testing by Russian forces. Pyongyang's missiles have since become far more accurate, according to Ukrainian intelligence.


Newsweek
an hour ago
- Newsweek
Iconic Restaurant Chain Closes All Locations: 'Time to Say Goodbye'
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Southwestern Tex-Mex chain Z'Tejas said it is closing its final location, ending over 30 years of business across Texas and Arizona. Why It Matters The closing of this once-iconic regional chain reflects broader challenges facing the restaurant industry due to rising costs and changed consumer habits following the COVID-19 pandemic. Several other American chains, including Denny's, Applebee's, TGI Fridays and Red Lobster have closed dozens of branches or filed for bankruptcy within the last year. What To Know The Austin-born chain Z'Tejas has faced troubles in recent years, having filed for bankruptcy twice. It started to close locations in 2017. Its final four locations, two in Texas and two in Arizona, began closing in recent months. Z'Tejas announced the closure of its final location in Kyle, Texas, as of June 30. A photo showing a stock image of tortillas. Tex-Mex chain Z'Tejas said it is closing its final location in Texas. A photo showing a stock image of tortillas. Tex-Mex chain Z'Tejas said it is closing its final location in Texas. Getty Images The restaurant chain wrote on its website: "After nearly three decades of serving communities across Texas and Arizona, it's time to say goodbye to this chapter. With our lease coming to an end and the challenges of today's market, we've made the very difficult decision to close [Z'Tejas]—our last remaining outpost." Z'Tejas was bought out of bankruptcy in 2018 by investors Michael Stone and Randy Cohen. In recent months, Cohen, who is now the sole owner, said he was seeking to sell off the chain's remaining four locations to focus on other ventures. "I'm not a restaurateur at the end," he told the Austin Business Journal. "This was a labor of love to make sure we didn't lose another restaurant soldier that's out there during these tough times." He said that Austin has "a crowded restaurant scene and a lot of people are going away because the economy is a little rougher. People are hurting and can't afford to take a family out for $150 for four people." "We still are a value-driven restaurant. Somewhere, obviously way above Chili's, but way under some of the other places," he said. It's thought as of January that the business could be sold for between $10 million and $12 million. The original Z'Tejas opened on Austin's famous Sixth Street in 1989, and that branch was closed in 2023. Its menu, which featured a blend of Mexican and Texan cuisine, included signature items such as cornbread, street corn risotto and fajitas. What People Are Saying Z'Tejas said in a statement on its website: "We are deeply grateful to our guests, neighbors, and friends for your support, your stories, and for making Z'Tejas a part of your lives. It's been our honor to serve you." What Happens Next With the closure of the final location, the chain is no longer in business.