Nonrenewal vs. cancellation: which letter are you holding?
A nonrenewal means your carrier is finishing out your current term and simply not offering a new one. A mid-term cancellation ends coverage before your term is up, which Arizona law only allows in limited situations (non-payment, fraud, a big change in risk). The response is different: a nonrenewal is a shopping project with a deadline; a cancellation is an emergency. Most letters going around right now are nonrenewals. (If yours is from State Farm specifically, start here.)
Why are so many Arizona homeowners being nonrenewed?
Arizona premiums and nonrenewals both climbed sharply after 2020. Rebuilding costs jumped, reinsurance (the insurance that insurance companies buy) got dramatically more expensive, and carriers started scoring wildfire exposure block by block. When a company decides it has too much Arizona risk on its books, trimming policies at renewal is how it sheds weight. Your roof may be fine. Your ZIP code's math changed.
What should you do after a nonrenewal? The playbook
- Circle the end date on the notice. That's your runway.
- Read the reason. Carriers generally must state one. Roof age? A claim? Wildfire zone? The reason tells you which markets to aim for next.
- Fix what's fixable, and photograph it. A re-coated roof, trimmed trees, a repaired fence around the pool — documentation turns "declined" into "quoted" with some underwriters.
- Gather your declarations page plus roof age, square footage, and any updates (roof, HVAC, water heater, panel). Quoting goes from days to hours when this is ready.
- Go independent. One application, multiple markets. When appetite is the problem, access is the answer.
- Bind before the old policy ends, then tell your mortgage servicer. No gap, no force-placed coverage.
The force-placed trap
If your lender doesn't see proof of insurance, they can buy "lender-placed" coverage on your behalf and bill your escrow. It's typically two to four times the price of a normal policy, and it usually protects the lender's interest in the structure — not your belongings, not your liability. Avoiding this is worth a week of focused shopping.
What if every insurance company says no?
It's rare, but if standard markets all decline, there are surplus-lines options, and Arizona homeowners in genuinely hard-to-place situations have paths an agent can walk you through. Expensive coverage beats no coverage while we work the problem — and re-shopping a year later often lands better.
Sources & further reading
Send us the notice and your dec page — we'll tell you honestly what your options look like, usually the same day.