AMARILLO METRO · AMARILLO, TX

Home Insurance Agents in Amarillo, TX

30 licensed home insurance agents serving Amarillo and surrounding areas. Compare independent agencies specializing in homeowners insurance.

Hail Risk · High
Flood Risk · Low
Wildfire Risk · Medium
Tornado Risk · High

Showing 30 advisors in Amarillo

Jeff Bara - State Farm Insurance Agent
Amarillo
SpecialtiesAuto · Home
CarriersState Farm
Jason Chafe - State Farm Insurance Agent
Amarillo
SpecialtiesAuto · Home
CarriersState Farm
Farmers Insurance - Megan Brittain
Amarillo
SpecialtiesAuto · Home
Russ Glaze - State Farm Insurance Agent
Amarillo
SpecialtiesAuto · Home
CarriersState Farm
Farmers Insurance - Lupe Laird
Amarillo
SpecialtiesAuto · Home · Life

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Jayden Parker: Allstate Insurance
Amarillo
SpecialtiesAuto · Home
Clarisha Canales: Allstate Insurance
Amarillo
SpecialtiesAuto · Home
Matt Moles: Allstate Insurance
Amarillo
SpecialtiesAuto · Renters · Home
Cody Long: Allstate Insurance
Amarillo
SpecialtiesLife · Auto · Home
Farmers Insurance - Michael Orman
Amarillo
SpecialtiesAuto · Home
CarriersFarmers

Insurance in Amarillo, TX

Shopping for insurance in Amarillo means you'll have plenty of options, with 177 licensed agencies serving the Texas Panhandle region. Of these, 147 specialize in general lines coverage like auto and homeowners insurance, while 79 focus on life and health products. However, only 107 agencies currently maintain active licenses, so it's worth verifying an agency's status before you start the quote process. Living in the Texas Panhandle puts your property squarely in the path of some serious weather risks that directly impact your insurance needs. Amarillo sits in an active tornado corridor and experiences some of the highest hail frequencies in the state, making comprehensive coverage and adequate dwelling limits essential for homeowners. The area also faces moderate wildfire exposure, particularly during dry periods, which means you'll want to discuss whether your policy includes sufficient coverage for alternative living expenses if evacuation becomes necessary. Working with an independent agent makes particular sense in this market because they can shop multiple carriers to find coverage that specifically addresses Amarillo's unique risk profile. Different insurance companies price hail and wind coverage very differently in this part of Texas, and an experienced local agent will know which carriers offer the best combination of coverage and competitive rates for Panhandle weather conditions. This local expertise becomes invaluable when you're comparing policies that may look similar on paper but offer very different protection when severe weather strikes.

Further reading

Home & Property
How to Determine the Age of Your Roof for Insurance Purposes
Insurers ask about your roof age for good reason — and the answer affects your premium, your coverage terms, and your insurability. Here's how to find out what you're working with.
Home & Property
Can Your Home Insurance Company Drop You in Texas? What You Need to Know
Cancellation and non-renewal are two different things in Texas — with different rules, different timelines, and different options for homeowners.
Home & Property
What Credit Score Do You Need for Good Home Insurance in Texas?
Your credit score affects your homeowners insurance premium more than most Texans realize. Here's how it works, what scores matter, and what you can do about it.

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Home Insurance FAQs — Amarillo, TX

How much does homeowners insurance cost in Amarillo?
Homeowners insurance premiums in Amarillo depend on your home's replacement cost, age, construction type, roof material and age, claims history on the property and on you personally, your deductible (including any separate wind/hail deductible), coverage limits, and endorsements. Location within Amarillo also matters — protection class, distance to a fire station, and local weather exposure all factor into pricing. Independent advisors can quote several carriers at once so you can compare coverage and price rather than relying on a single company's rate.
Does homeowners insurance cover roof replacement?
It depends on the cause of damage, your policy, and how your insurer settles roof claims. Sudden events like hail and wind are commonly covered, while gradual wear and tear, poor maintenance, and cosmetic-only damage generally are not. Many Texas policies also settle older roofs on an actual cash value basis, meaning depreciation is deducted, rather than full replacement cost. Reviewing your roof endorsement, deductible (which may be a percentage for wind and hail), and settlement terms with an advisor before a storm hits is important.
What is replacement cost coverage?
Replacement cost coverage helps pay to rebuild or repair your home and, on some policies, replace your personal property using current construction and retail costs without deducting for depreciation, subject to your policy limits. Actual cash value, by contrast, subtracts depreciation from the payout. Replacement cost typically costs more in premium but can make a large difference at claim time. Confirm whether your dwelling limit is set to full replacement cost, and ask whether extended or guaranteed replacement cost is available.
Do I need flood insurance?
Standard homeowners policies generally do not cover flooding from rising water. Depending on your property's location, elevation, and flood history, a separate flood policy — either through the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) or a private flood carrier — may be worth considering. Flood risk isn't limited to designated flood zones; heavy rainfall events across Texas regularly cause losses outside high-risk areas. An advisor can help you review flood maps, estimate rebuilding costs, and decide whether the coverage makes sense for your situation.
Why are homeowners insurance premiums increasing?
Premiums have risen across Texas because of higher rebuilding costs (materials and labor), more frequent and severe weather events, larger and more expensive claims, reinsurance costs paid by insurers, and changes to how carriers rate roofs and wind/hail exposure. Even homeowners without recent claims often see renewal increases. If your renewal jumps, it's reasonable to have an independent advisor re-shop the market and compare deductible structures, roof settlement terms, and coverage limits across several carriers before you renew.
What deductible should I choose?
A higher deductible generally lowers your premium but increases your out-of-pocket cost after a claim. Many Texas policies use a separate percentage-based deductible for wind and hail (often 1%–5% of the dwelling limit), which can be much larger than the standard "all other perils" deductible. Before choosing, look at your dwelling limit, do the math on what the percentage deductible actually equals in dollars, and confirm you're comfortable paying that amount after a storm. An advisor can model several deductible options at once.
Does homeowners insurance cover foundation damage?
Coverage for foundation damage depends on the cause of loss and your policy language. Sudden and accidental events — for example, damage from a covered burst pipe — may be covered, while normal settling, expansive soil movement, poor drainage, and long-term water intrusion are typically excluded. Foundation-related endorsements exist on some Texas policies but often come with limits and separate deductibles. If foundation concerns are a priority in your area, ask an advisor to walk through exactly what is and isn't covered on each quote.
Why use an independent homeowners insurance advisor?
Independent homeowners insurance advisors represent multiple carriers, so they can compare pricing, dwelling limits, wind/hail deductibles, roof settlement terms, and endorsements across several insurance companies at the same time. That side-by-side view makes it easier to see meaningful differences between policies rather than only price. If your property has an older roof, prior claims, or specific concerns like foundation or flood exposure, working with an independent advisor gives you access to carriers that may fit your situation better than a single company's product line.
What risks should homeowners in Amarillo consider?
Common considerations for homeowners in Amarillo include hail and windstorm exposure, heavy-rain and flash-flood potential, roof age and material, rebuilding costs relative to your current dwelling limit, and — in some areas — foundation movement from soil conditions. Review whether your policy uses a percentage wind/hail deductible, whether roof damage is settled at replacement cost or actual cash value, and whether you carry separate flood coverage. An independent advisor familiar with Amarillo can help match those coverage details to the actual risks around your property.
Why work with a local insurance advisor in Amarillo?
A local insurance advisor understands the carriers active in the Amarillo market, how each one prices wind, hail, and roof risk, and what endorsements are worth reviewing for homes in the area. Independent advisors compare multiple insurance companies for you, walk through deductibles and settlement terms in plain language, and can help re-shop coverage when renewals jump. Local knowledge doesn't guarantee lower premiums, but it usually leads to better-informed coverage decisions than picking a policy from a national rate quote alone.