In many of the biggest metro areas in the Southeast, households are less insured than they were eight years ago, according to a Trulia analysis of government data. That doesn’t bode well for residents dealing with the aftermath of Hurricane Matthew. In 2014, the U.S. Census Bureau reported that in that region’s biggest cities, the number of insured households dropped between 7 and 12 percent.
Residential Products Online content is now on probuilder.com! Same great products coverage, now all in one place!
billboard
leaderboard2
Related Stories
In some markets, plummeting supply doesn't matter right now
Specific age groups, races, and income levels saw bigger jumps into the renting pool than others
Why buyers in some markets are having trouble getting the homes they want
The Hispanic population rose in all the 100 major metros other than San Francisco and San Jose
For homebuyers willing to put down a traditional 20 percent down payment, a new study finds how many years of work it could take to achieve homeownership in the 50 biggest U.S. cities.
Markets with the largest decrease in entry-level home affordability underscore hurdles for first-time buyers
boombox2
boombox1
halfpage1
native1
catfish1
interstitial1