U.S. Cost Pressure by Location

Burden • Change • Offset

Insurance PressureCountyRI

Kent County Insurance Pressure

Tracks insurance-related affordability strain, including owner-cost burden proxy and recent movement.

Pressure Snapshot

Latest Insurance Pressure Signals

2024-12-31

Scale direction: Sustainability Score 0 = highest pressure, 100 = lowest pressure. Pressure Score 0 = low pressure, 100 = high pressure.

Component Pressure Score

76

High Pressure

Higher is worse (more pressure)

Trend

Stable

Overall Sustainability Score

38

High Pressure

Scale: 0 = highest pressure, 100 = lowest pressure

Burden Pressure Score

96

High Pressure

Change Pressure Score

34

Moderate

Offset Strength Score

N/A

Insufficient Data

Owner-cost burden proxy is 19.6% of income with -1.0% year-over-year movement.

Window: 2023 to 2024 • Higher component score = higher pressure

In Kent County, Insurance Pressure scores 76 and is stable in the latest window. This is the 2nd highest pressure component locally.

Compared with Rhode Island, this component is 7.2 points lower (less pressure).

Current top pressure drivers in Kent County are Utility Pressure (82, increasing) and Insurance Pressure (76, stable).

Component Pressure Score

The pressure level for this topic only. Higher means worse pressure in this location.

Trend

The direction this pressure is moving: increasing, stable, or decreasing.

Burden Score

How heavy the cost load is right now, before considering whether it is accelerating.

Change Score

How quickly pressure is rising or easing versus the prior period.

Offset Score

How much local income growth helps absorb pressure. Higher offset means stronger cushion.

Overall Sustainability Score

Net sustainability score for the full model. Higher is better and means lower overall pressure.

Related Components

Other Pressure Pages For Kent County

Research Path

Continue From Insurance Pressure

Compare this component page against the full location profile and then expand to peer geographies to verify whether this pressure pattern is local, county-wide, state-wide, or broader.