Kansas Home Insurance
Kansas's average cost, dominant risk, and a free replacement-cost estimate — no signup, no quote spam.
Avg. annual premium
$3,400/yr
Dominant risk
Tornado & hail
Hazard tier
high
Estimate your Kansas home insurance
Estimated annual home insurance
$2,867
Dwelling = sqft × rebuild cost. Doesn't include flood (NFIP) or earthquake (separate policies).
Kansas home insurance: what to know
Kansas sits squarely in Tornado Alley, and frequent hail and wind claims make it one of the most expensive states to insure a home.
Because Kansas is a high-hazard state for tornado & hail, expect a separate wind/hail or catastrophe deductible and confirm whether you also need flood or earthquake coverage, which standard policies never include.
Kansas home insurance FAQ
How much does home insurance cost in Kansas?
Homeowners insurance in Kansas averages roughly $3,400 per year, but your rate depends heavily on your home's rebuild cost, construction, claims history, and ZIP code. Use the estimator above and always compare at least three carriers.
What is the biggest home insurance risk in Kansas?
The dominant natural risk in Kansas is tornado & hail. Kansas sits squarely in Tornado Alley, and frequent hail and wind claims make it one of the most expensive states to insure a home.
Does Kansas home insurance cover floods and earthquakes?
No. Standard homeowners policies in Kansas — like everywhere in the U.S. — exclude flood and earthquake damage. Flood coverage comes from a separate NFIP or private flood policy, and earthquake coverage requires a separate policy or endorsement. Given Kansas's high-hazard profile, check whether you need either before a loss occurs.
How can I lower my home insurance in Kansas?
Compare at least three carriers, bundle home and auto, and raise your deductible if you can cover it. In a high-hazard state, ask about wind/hail mitigation credits — a fortified roof, storm shutters, or impact glass can cut a tornado & hail-driven premium meaningfully. Always insure to full replacement cost — under-insuring to save a few dollars backfires at claim time.