What an average can and cannot tell you in Delaware
- Treat a published average as a rough reference, not a replacement for a carrier quote.
- Local risk themes such as coastal wind, flood, storm surge, roof age can move prices by ZIP and carrier.
- Carrier appetite, protection class, and roof settlement assumptions can matter as much as the state name.
- In Delaware, separate wind, named-storm, and flood questions before comparing the premium.
Average premium checkpoints
| Question | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Was the same coverage used for each comparison? | Averages become misleading when one quote includes endorsements and another does not. |
| How local is the data? | Delaware statewide numbers may not describe the ZIP or construction type. |
| Are claims and credit factors allowed? | Some rating factors depend on state rules and carrier filings. |
| Did the roof assumption change? | Roof age and settlement wording can swing the number. |
Practical note
Use Delaware averages to frame expectations, then collect two or three quotes using the same coverage assumptions.