Core risk

Weather & Environmental Risk

Catastrophic loss pressure driven by severe weather exposure and seasonal volatility. This page explains the public signals behind weather & environmental risk and how they tend to show up in claims and pricing pressure in New Hampshire.

New Hampshire

State signal

66

/ 100

66/100
Score
Elevated
Trend Pending

Severe weather exposure is near the national midpoint based on FEMA hazard signals.

Sources

Public, regulator-grade inputs used for this risk.

  • FEMA National Risk Index
  • NOAA seasonal summaries
  • State storm event data

Signals tracked

What we measure for this risk

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Severe weather exposure baseline

Composite hazard exposure score for New Hampshire.

74.2State baseline

Coverage: Modeled estimate. Source: FEMA National Risk Index (County Hazards).

Hazard mix detail

FEMA National Risk Index hazard scores that feed the exposure blend.

Hail exposure score: 36.0

Flood exposure score: 86.4

Hurricane exposure score: 84.3

Ice & snow exposure score: 90.2

Scores use FEMA hazard index values on a 0-100 scale.

Core signals

Primary public inputs that define weather risk in New Hampshire.

Severe weather exposure

Hail, flood, hurricane, and ice/snow exposure signals.

Sources: FEMA National Risk Index

Additional signals

Supplemental weather signals added as coverage expands.

Seasonal volatility

Seasonal risk variance index capturing claim spikes.

Sources: NOAA seasonal summaries, State storm event data

Why weather exposure matters

Weather exposure reflects the mix of hazards that drive comprehensive losses in a location.

  • Hail, flood, hurricane, and winter events are major claim drivers.
  • Repeated events create repair backlogs and raise overall claim costs.
  • Exposure can shift quickly year to year, creating sudden pressure.