Lightning strikes may seem like a rarity, but when they do hit, their damage can be devastating.
And they are hitting homeowners’ wallets harder than they used to.
U.S. homeowners insurance losses tied to lightning strikes jumped 59% in 2025, totaling an estimated $1.65 billion, according to the Insurance Information Institute. Claims rose nearly 12% year over year, but the bigger story is cost: The average payout per claim climbed 42.8% to $26,616—nearly 147% higher than a decade ago.
But that’s what insurers paid out on average, not necessarily what a homeowner is left covering. How much of that falls on you depends on your insurance policy.
The takeaway isn’t that lightning is becoming more common. It’s that when it strikes, the damage is more expensive, and that’s reshaping what homeowners insurance will cost you going forward.
Why claims are getting pricier
Insurers point to a combination of rising repair costs and the sheer amount of expensive technology now sitting inside the average home.
“Home repair costs are higher than they’ve ever been. The materials and labor are all much higher-cost than they were a few years ago,” says Erica Ostrander, vice president of markets and franchise success at We Insure.
“Also, people’s homes have way more electronics that are expensive, which are also driving up the cost of claims—all the smart home features. When lightning strikes, a lot more is damaged. So, the costs of each claim are becoming more and more expensive.”
Repair costs rose roughly 14% between 2022 and 2024 alone, Ostrander says, and are up an estimated 61% over the past decade depending on where you live.
It might seem like a pricier claims environment should fall on insurers, not policyholders. But Ostrander says it doesn’t quite work that way.
“You won’t see an instant increase just because you had a claim,” she says. Instead, when claims across the board get more expensive, insurers eventually raise rates to stay solvent—typically requiring state regulatory approval first. It’s not an overnight jump tied to one homeowner’s bad luck, but a slower recalibration across an insurer’s entire book of business.
Lightning damage is more common than you think
There’s a reason “the odds of getting struck by lightning” has become shorthand for something very unlikely. But in reality, homes are a different story.
“It happens more often than you realize,” says Tim Harger, executive director of the Lightning Protection Institute. “You’ve got to take into consideration direct strikes—with direct strikes, you’re going to have the fire destruction to the building—and you’ve got to worry about nearby strikes, which hop on the power lines, the telephone lines, and cable lines, and get those extra surges and lightning currents going into your electronics.”
A strike doesn’t even need to hit a house directly to do serious damage.
“If it hits a tree and then jumps over, because it’s looking for a better path to ground, that’s going to still be virtually like getting a direct strike,” Harger says. A single lightning flash can branch out and hit multiple buildings at once, multiplying the damage.
What coverage actually looks like
Lightning is typically one of the perils covered under a standard homeowners or renters policy, Ostrander says. But how much that coverage actually pays out can vary significantly based on the fine print.
One distinction worth understanding, she says, is replacement cost versus actual cash value coverage. If lightning fries a 7-year-old TV and you have replacement cost coverage, the insurer pays to replace it with a new one. With actual cash value coverage—often cheaper—the payout reflects the TV’s depreciated value, which may be a fraction of replacement cost. Upgrading typically adds only a modest amount to a policy, Ostrander says, but it can make a meaningful difference in how “whole” a homeowner is made after a claim.
Homeowners should also ask about loss-of-use coverage, sometimes called additional living expense coverage.
“If lightning strikes and your house is uninhabitable, the homeowners insurance policy is going to pay for you to live somewhere else during the time while the repairs are being made,” Ostrander says. “So even—it’s not necessarily just the house, it’s getting you to where you can work and live again.”
That detail, she notes, matters more than ever for the growing number of people who work from home.
Her advice: Don’t wait for a claim to find out what you have.
“Go to your insurance agent and have them review it with you,” she says, including any exclusions or limits tied to electronics specifically.
How to lower your risk—and possibly your costs
There’s no way to lightning-proof a house entirely, but homeowners aren’t powerless against it either.
“The real answer to getting stuff to not get damaged is they need to have lightning protection systems on the structures,” says Harger. “They should be done by certified individuals—it’s kind of a unique trade, but you wouldn’t want to have your plumber doing your electrical work.”
Whole-house surge protection is worth asking about as well, Ostrander says. It works alongside a lightning protection system by helping blunt the damage from power surges that travel through a home’s electrical wiring during a strike—including the kind of nearby or indirect hits that don’t touch the house directly.
Tree maintenance matters, too; though, insurers often check for it upfront: A limb resting on the roof can be enough for an insurer to require it be trimmed back as a condition of coverage. But once a policy is in place, Ostrander says, overgrown trees aren’t typically something insurers come back to later. She says she hasn’t seen claims denied simply because a homeowner had branches touching the house at the time of a strike.
Lightning claims aren’t spiking because storms are getting worse—they’re getting more expensive because homes carry more value inside them, repair costs are climbing, and even indirect strikes can do real damage.
The fix isn’t panic, it’s preparation: Know what your policy actually covers, close gaps like replacement cost versus actual cash value, and invest in protection before storm season tests it.

