Low wildfire risk · 13/100
Pensacola, FL Fire Insurance
Pensacola carries a low wildfire risk rating (13/100). 1 wildfires have been recorded within 25 miles since 2000 — the closest, the NLO Fire (2015), just 6.9 miles away. Coverage is widely available and competitively priced — the risk here is overpaying, not being dropped. Here's what coverage costs, who still writes here, and how to lock it in.
See Pensacola coverage options →Pensacola's wildfire risk profile
13/100
FireRisk score
Low
Risk band
7–17
Neighborhood range
1
Fires within 25 mi (since 2000)
What this means for you
- The 13/100 score rates this area's wildfire exposure from 0 (minimal) to 100 (extreme). Insurers use similar models to decide whether to offer a policy and what to charge — a score in this range usually means coverage stays available and competitively priced.
- “Low” is the band that score falls into. Coverage is widely available and competitively priced here.
- The 7–17 range is how much risk varies street to street. Your exact address could score noticeably higher or lower than the headline — check it before you assume.
- 1 fire within 25 miles since 2000 is the area's recent track record. Underwriters treat a longer nearby fire history as higher risk for the whole ZIP — not only the homes that actually burned.
The closest federally recorded wildfire is the NLO Fire (2015), about 6.9 miles away. Insurers weigh this proximity heavily — risk varies street by street, so see the full Pensacola risk report or check your exact address.
What low risk means for your coverage
Coverage is widely available and competitively priced — the risk here is overpaying, not being dropped. Florida’s property-insurance crisis is driven overwhelmingly by hurricane and wind exposure rather than wildfire, though the state’s pine flatwoods and the Ocala/Big Cypress corridors do burn during winter and spring dry seasons. Years of catastrophe losses and litigation pushed many private carriers to exit or fail, leaving Citizens Property Insurance Corporation as the backstop before recent legislative reforms began returning policies to the private market.
What fire insurance costs in Pensacola
Florida homeowner premiums are among the highest in the nation, driven mainly by hurricane/wind risk and reinsurance costs rather than wildfire. High-exposure coastal and inland homes can pay several times the national average, and wind-mitigation features are typically the largest lever on price.
~$486/yr in mitigation-linked discounts and credits may be available to Pensacola homeowners who harden and document their home.
Citizens Property Insurance Corporation — the backstop
Florida’s state-created, not-for-profit insurer of last resort (the residual market) for homeowners who can’t obtain coverage on the private market. Reforms aim to depopulate Citizens by moving policies back to private carriers, so re-shopping the admitted market remains worthwhile. How FAIR Plans work →
Low risk — you may be overpaying.
Low-risk and well-mitigated homes qualify for credits many agents never check. A quick comparison shows whether you’re leaving money on the table.
What happens if you wait
High-risk homeowners have faced steep rate increases in recent years. Non-standard market policies — when you can find them — often cost substantially more.
Insurers have filed hundreds of thousands of non-renewals in fire-risk areas in recent years. Notices typically arrive ~60 days before expiration.
IBHS-certified homes may qualify for premium reductions with participating carriers. Discounts vary by carrier, state, and property.
Research suggests homes with elevated fire risk can sell below comparable homes, as buyers price in insurance cost. Individual results vary.
See your options before rates change.
We match Florida homeowners with licensed agents who write low-risk wildfire homes. Start with your email — we’ll send your comparison and, if you want, connect you with an agent. Free, no obligation.
$486/yr — typical savings when Florida homeowners compare carriers.
Go deeper on Pensacola
See the full wildfire-risk breakdown, or compare insurance in nearby Florida areas.
Pensacola wildfire risk report →Pensacola fire insurance FAQ
Is it hard to get fire insurance in Pensacola, FL?
Pensacola carries a low wildfire risk rating (13/100 on FireRisk's federal-data model). Across the area our samples range 7–17/100, so it varies by neighborhood. Coverage is widely available and competitively priced — the risk here is overpaying, not being dropped. 1 wildfires have been federally recorded within 25 miles since 2000, the closest being the NLO Fire (2015), 6.9 miles away.
How much does fire insurance cost in Pensacola?
Florida homeowner premiums are among the highest in the nation, driven mainly by hurricane/wind risk and reinsurance costs rather than wildfire. High-exposure coastal and inland homes can pay several times the national average, and wind-mitigation features are typically the largest lever on price. A low-risk Pensacola home sits in the more affordable range of that spread. Your exact premium depends on construction, rebuild cost, and documented mitigation — homeowners here may access roughly $486/yr in mitigation-linked discounts and credits.
Does the Citizens Property Insurance Corporation cover Pensacola?
Florida’s state-created, not-for-profit insurer of last resort (the residual market) for homeowners who can’t obtain coverage on the private market. Reforms aim to depopulate Citizens by moving policies back to private carriers, so re-shopping the admitted market remains worthwhile. It applies statewide, so Pensacola homeowners declined by admitted carriers can use it as a backstop.
Can I lower my Pensacola fire insurance premium?
Yes. Document defensible space, harden the home (Class-A roof, ember-resistant vents, Zone 0 clearance), and pursue IBHS "Wildfire Prepared Home" certification — these unlock 5–25% discounts with participating carriers and can be the difference between a "yes" and a non-renewal.
Florida fire insurance guide →
Statewide market, FAIR Plan, non-renewal playbook, and every discount available.
Been non-renewed? →
Your rights and the step-by-step path back to coverage after a non-renewal.
FireRisk scores are modeled from federal wildfire data for orientation and are not an insurance rating, an offer of coverage, or a guarantee of price or eligibility. Cost and savings figures are estimates that vary by home, carrier, and year. Verify all coverage with licensed carriers and confirm current programs with your state Department of Insurance. FireRisk.ai is independent; we may be compensated when you request quotes through a partner.