If you own commercial property in California, you've likely noticed your insurance renewal premium climbing — and 2026 is no exception. Between ongoing wildfire exposure, carrier departures from the state, and sweeping regulatory changes from the California Department of Insurance, the commercial property insurance market in the Golden State is undergoing its most significant transformation in decades.
Here's what's happening, what it means for your properties, and what you can do to manage costs without sacrificing coverage.
Why California Commercial Insurance Rates Are Rising
Wildfire Exposure and Catastrophic Losses
California's wildfire seasons have become increasingly destructive. The cumulative insured losses from the 2020-2025 wildfire seasons have fundamentally changed how carriers price risk in the state. Even properties that aren't in designated wildfire zones are seeing rate increases because carriers are repricing their entire California portfolios — spreading catastrophic risk across all policyholders.
Commercial properties in the Wildland-Urban Interface (WUI) — including many apartment complexes, hotels, and retail centers in foothill communities — face the steepest increases, with some seeing 40-60% rate hikes or outright non-renewals.
Carrier Restrictions and Market Exits
Several major carriers have pulled back from writing new commercial property business in California or have imposed strict underwriting restrictions. This reduced competition means fewer options and higher prices. Properties with older roofs, wood-frame construction, or limited fire protection are particularly affected.
The result: commercial property owners in California are competing for a shrinking pool of available capacity. Submissions that would have received five competitive quotes in 2022 may now receive only one or two.
Regulatory Changes: Proposition 103 Reform
California's insurance regulatory framework is evolving. The Department of Insurance has been implementing reforms that allow carriers to use forward-looking catastrophe models (rather than only historical loss data) in rate-setting. While this is intended to attract carriers back to the state, the near-term effect is higher premiums as carriers adjust to more realistic risk pricing.
The FAIR Plan — California's insurer of last resort — has also expanded its commercial property offerings, but with significantly higher rates and more limited coverage than admitted carriers.
What Property Type You Own Matters
Apartment Complexes
Apartment complex insurance in California is heavily influenced by liability trends, habitability claims, and construction type. Wood-frame garden-style apartments face higher rates than concrete mid-rises. Properties with deferred maintenance, older roofs, or knob-and-tube wiring may struggle to find admitted market options at all.
Hotels & Hospitality
Hotel insurance in California is complicated by seasonal revenue exposure, liquor liability, and the state's litigious environment. Coastal and resort properties face additional wind and flood considerations. Carriers want to see well-maintained properties, modern fire suppression systems, and strong loss histories.
Gas Stations
Gas station insurance remains one of the hardest placements in California. Underground storage tank exposure, environmental liability, and the state's stringent regulations create a limited market. Rates for gas station insurance in California can be 30-50% higher than in Texas or Illinois for comparable operations.
Strip Malls & Retail
Strip mall insurance rates depend heavily on tenant mix and location. Properties with restaurant tenants face higher rates due to fire exposure. Centers in high-crime areas see liability surcharges. However, well-maintained centers with diverse, lower-risk tenants in suburban locations can still find competitive options.
5 Strategies to Manage Your California Insurance Costs
- Shop early: Start your renewal process 90-120 days before expiration. The California market moves slowly, and late submissions get worse terms.
- Invest in risk mitigation: Fire-resistant roofing, sprinkler systems, security cameras, and brush clearance can directly reduce premiums. Document everything.
- Consider higher deductibles: Moving from a $5,000 to a $25,000 deductible can save 15-25% on premium — a worthwhile trade for properties with strong maintenance programs and cash reserves.
- Bundle intelligently: Placing property, liability, and umbrella with the same carrier often yields package discounts. Multi-property portfolios can access commercial package pricing that single-property owners can't.
- Work with a specialist broker: A broker who understands California's commercial property market can access surplus lines carriers, wholesale markets, and programs that generalist agents don't know about.
📞 If your California commercial property renewal is coming up, don't wait. Contact Johal Insurance Brokers at (805) 380-5564 to start the process early and explore all available options — including surplus lines carriers that may offer better terms than your current market.
Looking Ahead: What to Expect in Late 2026
Market conditions are expected to stabilize — but not improve dramatically — through the remainder of 2026. Carriers that pulled back are slowly re-entering with more restrictive underwriting, and the FAIR Plan continues to expand capacity. The biggest improvements will come for property owners who invest in risk mitigation, maintain clean loss histories, and work with brokers who have deep relationships with carriers still active in the California commercial market.
The days of "set it and forget it" commercial property insurance in California are over. Active portfolio management, annual coverage reviews, and proactive risk management aren't optional anymore — they're the difference between competitive premiums and paying double market rate.