Report: Fortified roof program isn’t reaching every homeowner equally

(The Center Square) − A new review of the Louisiana Fortify Homes Program highlights its potential to ease financial pressures for homeowners and taxpayers, though it’s not reaching everyone equally.

The program, which incentivizes upgrading roofs to the storm-resistant FORTIFIED standard, is proving cost-effective amid Louisiana’s sky-high insurance costs.

The median LFHP participant saved $1,250 annually on insurance — slashing premiums from $5,625 to $4,375 — after upgrading their roof for $16,229, offset by a $10,000 grant, according to the Louisiana Legislative Auditor.

Over 15 years, these savings, plus $213 yearly in reduced uninsured losses, outpace the $6,229 out-of-pocket cost, especially in South Louisiana. With 5,413 homes certified as of February 2025 (up from 313 in 2023), the program could lessen the state’s disaster recovery burden, a win for taxpayers.

Louisiana, where homeowners spend 2.1% of income on insurance versus 1.6% in other hurricane-prone states, saw a record 26% premium hike in 2023.

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For regular folks, the program’s a lifeline — most participants rave about it, according to the auditor. But very low-income households (homes under $90,000) are largely left out, comprising just 1% of participants despite being 15% of South Louisiana’s homeowners.

Extra costs like the $500 evaluation fee or required repairs often exceed what they can afford, even with the grant.

The Louisiana Department of Insurance is teaming up with community groups to boost access, but barriers like the homestead exemption rule still exclude some. The audit revealed that 5% of survey respondents who did not upgrade to a FORTIFIED Roof cited the LFHP homestead exemption requirement as a barrier.

The auditor also mentions that the pace of fortification needs to “to increase significantly in order for the state to have a meaningful percentage of homes certified as FORTIFIED.”

“With 677,000 owner-occupied homes in hurricane-prone parts of the state, to get 25% of these certified as FORTIFIED over a 10-year period would require the number of new certificates issued every month to increase from its current average of 364 to 1,365, a 275% increase,” the auditor wrote.

For taxpayers, wider adoption could cut public disaster costs. For everyday Louisianans, it’s a chance at relief — if they can get in.

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