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ALASKA · MOBILE HOME

Mobile Home Insurance in Alaska — Carriers, Cost & Coverage

Manufactured homes outside Anchorage and Fairbanks often require Bush-route underwriting most national carriers won't touch. A mobile-home policy in Alaska (sometimes called an MH-7 or HO-7) is structured differently from a stick-built homeowners policy: dwelling valuation is closer to actual cash value, earthquakes & wildfires drives most claim activity, and carrier appetite is narrower — most national insurers won't quote.

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Avg annual premium (AK)

$1,180

Dominant peril

earthquakes & wildfires

Regulator

Alaska DOI

  • Top in-state carriers: Foremost, American Modern, Umialik
  • Singlewide, doublewide, triplewide all eligible (HUD-code post-1976)
  • No formal wind-mit credit program in this state
  • Permanent foundation typically lowers premium 10-20%
  • Pre-1976 (pre-HUD code) units almost always uninsurable
  • Replacement-cost vs. actual-cash-value matters — confirm before binding

Published 2026-05-17 · Last reviewed 2026-05-17

Who writes manufactured-home insurance in Alaska

Alaska mobile-home policies typically include frozen-pipe and snow-load endorsements absent in Lower-48 quotes. Umialik (the Alaska-based regional) writes year-round in communities where Foremost won't go past mile 0 of the Dalton Highway.

Carrier appetite is materially different from stick-built homeowners insurance. The big-name national writers most Alaska homeowners default to — State Farm, Allstate, Liberty Mutual — either don't quote manufactured homes at all or quote them through limited regional subsidiaries at non-competitive rates. The specialist carriers (Foremost and American Modern) almost always quote 25-40% cheaper than what a generalist agent will offer you first.

  • Foremost — actively writing in Alaska
  • American Modern — actively writing in Alaska
  • Umialik — actively writing in Alaska

What a Alaska mobile-home policy actually covers

An HO-7 policy in Alaska covers six standard categories: the dwelling (the unit itself, plus permanently attached additions like decks, skirting, and awnings), other structures (detached sheds, carports), personal property, loss of use, personal liability, and medical payments to others.

Critical wrinkle: the dwelling is typically valued at "stated value" or "actual cash value" — meaning depreciation is deducted at claim time — unless you specifically buy "replacement cost on dwelling" as an endorsement. Replacement cost endorsements raise premium 10-20% but materially change what you receive after a total loss. For Alaska units that face frequent earthquakes & wildfires, the endorsement is almost always worth it.

Liability coverage usually starts at $100,000 per occurrence; bumping to $300,000 typically adds $40-80/yr and is worth it for any household with a pool, trampoline, or dog.

What drives Alaska premium up or down

Alaska's dominant peril (earthquakes & wildfires) sets the baseline. Beyond that, six factors swing the quote 30-60%:

Alaska doesn't run a codified wind-mitigation credit program like Florida or South Carolina, but several carriers (notably Foremost) offer informal underwriting credits for documented anchoring, skirting, and roof condition. Ask explicitly.

  • Year of manufacture — post-1994 (Wind Zone II/III HUD update) units quote materially cheaper
  • Foundation type — permanent masonry/concrete foundation cuts premium 10-20% vs. pier-and-beam
  • Roof age and condition — most carriers now write ACV not RCV on roofs >10 yrs
  • Heat source — wood stove, pellet stove, and space heaters add 15-25% surcharge
  • Park vs. owned land — owned-land placements quote 5-15% cheaper than park-lot units
  • Distance to coast / WUI zone — varies enormously by ZIP within the same county

Common exclusions and gotchas in Alaska

Flood is not covered by any standard manufactured-home policy in Alaska — you need a separate NFIP policy if your unit sits in a flood-prone zone. The NFIP residential rate map (FEMA Risk Rating 2.0) prices each unit individually now; quotes vary from $400 to $4,000+ depending on elevation and base flood depth.

Earth movement (earthquake, landslide, sinkhole) is excluded statewide and requires a separate endorsement or standalone policy. In Alaska the relevant peril is earthquakes — confirm whether earthquake or land-movement coverage is meaningful for your specific location before paying for the endorsement.

Cosmetic-only roof damage is increasingly excluded by Alaska carriers writing in hail-prone counties. Read the cosmetic damage exclusion (CDE) endorsement carefully — it means a hailstorm that dents but doesn't penetrate the roof won't trigger replacement.

Vacant homes (unoccupied >60 days) lose coverage under most Alaska policies. If you snowbird, travel for work, or own the unit as a rental, you need either a vacancy permit endorsement or a landlord/dwelling fire (DP-1 or DP-3) policy.

How to quote Alaska mobile-home insurance the right way

Don't start with a generalist agent who runs you through their primary carrier first. Go direct to a specialist or to a captive agent who actively writes manufactured-home risks in Alaska. Foremost and American Modern are usually the fastest paths to a competitive quote.

Before you call, have: VIN/serial number of the unit, year of manufacture, length and width (singlewide / doublewide / triplewide footprint), foundation type, anchoring documentation if available, roof age and material, heating source, and exact Alaska address with ZIP. Quotes given without these details are placeholder numbers — the bind-time premium will be higher.

Get at least three quotes. Alaska manufactured-home rates vary materially carrier to carrier — we routinely see 30-45% spreads between the cheapest and most expensive quote for the same unit, same address, same coverage limits.

Common Questions

Answers Before You Call

How much does mobile-home insurance cost in Alaska?+

Average Alaska manufactured-home premiums run about $1,180/year for a typical doublewide on a permanent foundation. Coastal, WUI, and high-hail counties run 1.5-3x that; rural inland placements quote materially below. Foremost and American Modern are usually the most competitive starting points.

Which carriers actually write mobile-home insurance in Alaska?+

Foremost, American Modern, Umialik. Most big-name national homeowners carriers (State Farm, Allstate, Liberty Mutual) either don't quote manufactured homes in Alaska or quote them at non-competitive specialty rates. Going direct to a specialist saves 25-40% versus what a generalist agent will offer.

Is my pre-1976 mobile home insurable in Alaska?+

Almost never. Pre-1976 units predate the HUD construction code and most carriers — including all four major writers in Alaska — decline them at intake. A few surplus-lines markets occasionally quote pre-HUD units at 3-5x normal rates, usually liability-only.

Do I need separate flood insurance for a Alaska mobile home?+

Yes if your unit is in a FEMA designated flood zone (A, AE, V, VE). Standard Alaska HO-7 manufactured-home policies exclude rising water under every coverage section. NFIP residential flood policies for manufactured homes run $400-4,000+ annually under Risk Rating 2.0 depending on elevation.

Does Alaska require manufactured-home insurance by law?+

No — Alaska doesn't mandate manufactured-home insurance by statute. But almost all mobile-home park leases and every chattel/mortgage lender require proof of property coverage with liability of at least $100,000 and lender's interest endorsement on file.

How is my mobile home valued at claim time in Alaska?+

Default is "actual cash value" or "stated value" — meaning depreciation is deducted from the claim payment. Buying "replacement cost on dwelling" as an endorsement raises premium 10-20% and means a total loss pays out at today's cost to replace the unit, not its depreciated value. Worth it in Alaska given earthquakes & wildfires exposure.

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Call Now (855) 629-1574Free quote service. CoverShield connects you with state-licensed insurance agents — we don't issue policies. By calling you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms.