Living in Hawaiʻi means living alongside some of the most powerful natural forces on earth. Earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, hurricanes, tsunamis, flooding, wildfires, and power outages are all part of the reality here, not distant possibilities.
Knowing what to do before, during, and after an emergency matters. So does understanding how your insurance coverage applies when something actually happens. The guides below cover both: immediate safety steps and the insurance considerations that most people only think about after the fact.

Prepare for What Hawaiʻi Faces
Each guide covers safety steps, common risks, insurance gaps, and what to do if you need to file a claim.
Earthquakes
Hawaiʻi experiences thousands of earthquakes every year. Most go unnoticed, but the ones that don’t can cause serious structural and financial damage, especially on Hawaiʻi Island.
Tsunamis
Hawaiʻi’s position in the Pacific means tsunami threats can come from local earthquakes or seismic events thousands of miles away. Evacuation timing and flood coverage both play a role in how prepared you really are.
Hurricanes & Tropical Storms
Hurricane season runs from June through November. Even storms that pass nearby without making direct landfall can bring damaging winds, heavy rain, and storm surge across multiple islands.
Volcanic Activity
Active volcanoes are part of what makes Hawaiʻi unique, but eruptions bring real consequences: lava flows, vog, ground cracking, and property damage that standard policies may not cover.
Flooding & Heavy Rains
Intense rainfall events can trigger flash floods with little warning, particularly in valleys and low-lying areas. Flood damage requires separate coverage from a standard homeowners policy.
Wildfires
Dry conditions, strong winds, and non-native grasslands have increased wildfire risk across the islands. The threat extends well beyond rural areas into communities many residents wouldn’t expect.
Power Outages
Extended outages can follow major weather events or infrastructure failures. For businesses, the financial impact of lost power often goes deeper than most people anticipate.
Talk to Us Before the Next Emergency
The right coverage should already be in place when something happens. If you’re unsure whether your current policy accounts for the hazards you actually face in Hawaiʻi, we can help you find out.
