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Insurance Costs and Climate Exposure Are Repricing Real Estate Risk

June 2, 2026 - 20:41

Insurance Costs and Climate Exposure Are Repricing Real Estate Risk

Industry leaders at the Urban Land Institute's 2026 Resilience Summit said physical climate threats are now a primary factor in commercial real estate valuation, investment strategy, and long-term asset strength. The message was clear: the old models for pricing property risk no longer hold.

Speakers pointed to surging insurance premiums as the most visible signal of this shift. In coastal markets and wildfire-prone regions, annual insurance costs have tripled in some cases, directly cutting into net operating income. For investors, that means a building's cash flow is no longer predictable based solely on local market conditions. It now depends on how exposed the structure is to flooding, heat, or wind.

Beyond insurance, lenders are tightening underwriting for assets in high-risk zones. Loan-to-value ratios are dropping, and interest rates are climbing for properties that lack resilience upgrades. One panelist noted that a building with a certified green roof and flood barriers can still secure favorable terms, while a similar asset without those features may struggle to refinance.

The summit also highlighted a growing divide between "resilient" and "vulnerable" assets. Institutional capital is flowing toward properties in low-risk metros or those with hardened infrastructure. Meanwhile, secondary and tertiary markets with high climate exposure are seeing a pullback. This repricing is not a temporary correction. Executives described it as a structural shift that will permanently separate winning assets from stranded ones.

Developers are now being asked to model climate scenarios over a 30-year holding period, not just the next five. The consensus was that ignoring physical risk is no longer an option. It is a direct threat to returns and portfolio stability.


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