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California’s wildfire crisis just hit a new financial flashpoint, and it’s not happening in the forests — it’s happening in the insurance system. The California FAIR Plan, the state’s insurer of last resort, has seen its exposure explode to a staggering $650 billion, more than double what it carried just a few years ago. At the same time, the plan is requesting a 35.8% rate hike, setting off alarm bells for homeowners, regulators, and anyone who cares about housing stability in wildfire-prone areas.
This isn’t just an insurance industry story — it’s a housing story, a climate story, and a cost-of-living story all rolled into one. If you live in California, know someone who does, or care about the future of insurability in high-risk regions, this matters more than you might think.
How the FAIR Plan Went From Safety Net to Financial Giant
The FAIR Plan was never designed to be a massive insurer. It was meant to be a backup option—a last resort for homeowners who couldn’t get coverage in the private market. But as wildfire risks intensified and major insurers pulled back from high-risk areas, the FAIR Plan became less of a safety net and more of a primary provider for hundreds of thousands of Californians…