A New FHFA Rule Could Lower What Millions of Homeowners Pay for Insurance Every Month

April 02, 20265 min read

A New FHFA Rule Could Lower What Millions of Homeowners Pay for Insurance Every Month

A Policy Change That Deserves Far More Attention Than It Is Getting

On March 18, 2026 the Federal Housing Finance Agency announced a change to how Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac handle roof insurance requirements. The announcement was quietly significant. It received limited mainstream coverage despite the fact that it has the potential to reduce monthly housing costs for a substantial portion of mortgage borrowers across the country.

If you are a current homeowner or a buyer who has been watching affordability numbers closely this is the kind of update that is worth understanding clearly and acting on promptly.

What the Rule Change Actually Says

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will now accept actual cash value coverage on roofs rather than requiring full replacement cost value insurance. The distinction between these two coverage types is what makes the change financially meaningful for borrowers.

Replacement cost value coverage pays for the full cost of replacing a damaged or destroyed roof with a brand new equivalent regardless of the age or condition of the existing roof. That coverage is priced accordingly by insurers because the exposure is significant. A full roof replacement on a modern home is a substantial expense and the insurer bears that full cost under a replacement cost policy.

Actual cash value coverage pays for the roof at its current depreciated value rather than the cost of a brand new replacement. Because the insurer's exposure is lower under this structure the premium is correspondingly lower. For a roof that is several years old the difference in premium between replacement cost and actual cash value coverage can be meaningful.

The significance of the Fannie and Freddie change is that lenders who sell loans to these agencies, which represents the majority of conventional mortgage lenders, previously had to require replacement cost coverage to satisfy agency guidelines. That requirement is now relaxed to allow actual cash value coverage and the premium savings that come with it.

Why the Timing of This Change Matters

Average homeowners insurance premiums have increased approximately 46 percent since 2021 with the average annual cost reaching nearly $2,948 by the end of 2025. That increase has been felt broadly across the country and for many households it has represented a meaningful and unwelcome addition to monthly housing costs that was not part of the financial picture when they purchased their homes.

As John Cobain explains the insurance cost increase has not been abstract for the buyers and homeowners he works with. It has shown up in debt-to-income calculations that are tighter than expected, in monthly payment surprises at closing, and in affordability conversations where insurance has become a more significant variable than it was just a few years ago.

A policy change that creates downward pressure on those insurance costs addresses a real and current pain point for a large number of borrowers rather than solving a hypothetical future problem.

How Many Borrowers This Actually Affects

Approximately 70 percent of all mortgages in the United States are sold to Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac and are therefore subject to their insurance guidelines. That means the vast majority of conventional mortgage borrowers are in the pool of homeowners who could potentially benefit from this change.

This is not a niche program for a specific subset of buyers. It is a guideline change at the core of the conventional mortgage market and the potential impact runs accordingly broad across the borrower population.

What Current Homeowners Should Do Right Now

If you are a current homeowner the most immediate action worth taking is a conversation with your insurance provider. Ask specifically whether your current policy carries replacement cost coverage on the roof, whether switching to actual cash value coverage is an option under your policy given the updated Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac guidelines, and what the premium difference would look like.

The conversation is straightforward and the potential savings are worth finding out about. Depending on the age of your roof, your current premium, and your insurer the reduction could range from modest to meaningful.

It is worth understanding clearly that actual cash value coverage does provide less protection than replacement cost coverage if a major loss occurs. That tradeoff deserves honest consideration. For many homeowners the premium savings will outweigh the difference in coverage. For others the fuller protection of replacement cost coverage will still be worth maintaining. Your insurance agent can walk you through what makes sense for your specific roof age and overall policy structure.

What This Means for Buyers

For buyers who have been factoring insurance costs into affordability calculations this change is a genuine piece of good news. Lower insurance premiums reduce the total projected monthly housing payment which affects debt-to-income ratios and the overall affordability picture in a favorable direction.

In an environment where insurance has been one of the persistent headwinds to homeownership affordability a rule change that creates meaningful premium reduction potential for the majority of borrowers is worth paying attention to and worth discussing with your loan officer before you finalize your purchase budget.

The Updates That Actually Move the Needle Rarely Make the News

The mortgage and housing industry generates policy changes regularly and the ones that have the most direct impact on what borrowers actually pay are often the ones that receive the least mainstream attention. The Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac roof coverage change is a clear example of that pattern.

John Cobain tracks these kinds of developments and brings them to clients and prospective buyers before they show up in general news coverage because the value of that information depends on knowing it early enough to act on it. Reach out to John Cobain to find out how this specific change affects your situation and to stay ahead of the updates that actually affect your monthly housing costs.


Sources

FHFA.gov FannieMae.com FreddieMac.com YahooFinance.com MortgageNewsDaily.com

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