Home Insurance in Vermont: $350K Dwelling, $2,500 Deductible
Estimated Annual Premium: $1290 to $1570
Estimated Monthly Premium: $110 to $130
The range reflects typical variation within your profile. Your actual premium may fall outside this range based on factors not modeled here.
What This Scenario Changes
In Vermont, your estimated annual premium is about $1290 to $1570, which is roughly $110 to $130 per month.
What moves this estimate: the dwelling and deductible inputs work together with winter weather exposure. In this scenario, insurers are modeling the rebuild amount and the share of the claim you pay first, then applying the state-level baseline.
How to interpret the range: if you want to reduce annual cost, compare higher deductibles against the dollar amount you would need to pay after a claim. If you want broader protection, compare higher dwelling scenarios against rebuild cost pressure reflected in the snapshot.
- Tradeoff: $2,500 Deductible shifts more of the claim amount to you after a loss. That can lower your upfront cost, but it raises your out-of-pocket share when you need coverage.
- Tradeoff: $350K Dwelling changes the rebuild amount the estimate models. If repairs would be expensive in Vermont, higher dwelling protection usually aligns better with that cost, but it can raise premium.
- Where this matters most: Midwest hail, tornado, and severe storm patterns tends to influence the size and frequency of covered loss events, so scenario inputs determine how much of that environment the estimate assumes for you.
Average home insurance in Vermont · Home by State
How This Estimate Is Calculated
Home estimates use state-level average premiums with multipliers for dwelling value and deductible. County-level pages apply a geographic factor. Educational estimates only.
See our how we calculate page.