The Allstate Corporation, a provider of personal property and casualty insurance in the US, has estimated catastrophe losses for the month of April 2026 of $870 million or $687 million, after-tax.
These losses include 10 wind and hail events, with approximately 70% of the losses related to two events.
Comparably, for March 2026, Allstate estimated catastrophe losses of $925 million, or $731 million after tax, which included 15 wind and hail events; just three of these events were responsible for approximately 80% of the month’s total losses. For April 2025, catastrophe losses were estimated at $594 million or $469 million, after-tax.
As of 30 April 2026, Allstate had 25.80 million Auto insurance policies in force, slightly higher than at the end of March 2026 and up from 25.17 million a year earlier. Homeowners policies totalled 7.7 million, marginally higher month on month and slightly up from 7.57 million in April 2025.
Other personal lines stood at 4.92 million, compared to 4.90 million in March 2026 and up from 4.88 million in April 2025. Commercial lines accounted for 179,000 policies, down from 184,000 a year earlier.
In total, protection policies in force reached 38.57 million, an increase compared to the 37.81 million reported for April 2025.
Since March 2025, Allstate Protection has achieved steady year-over-year growth in policies in force, expanding its market share in 57% of states for auto insurance and 83% of states for homeowners insurance.
Therefore, the company will adjust its reporting frequency for policies in force; next month’s release will serve as the final report to include this data.






