Having home insurance is part and parcel to owning a home. Here is a list of what’s covered and what’s not under most home insurance policies. Bottom line…make sure your clients to read the fine print.
- Liability insurance covered
- Helps pay for legal and medical costs when someone is injured on your property.
- Helps to pay for the injured person’s lost wages due to injury on you property and their pain/suffering
- Some policies protect the policyholder outside the home if they damage someone else’s property.
- Theft from property when home is burgled is covered
- “Extra” valuables such as jewelry, art, technology, furs, etc.) may need riders attached to the regular policy for extra coverage (costing “extra” on top of policy
- Personal Property covered
- Same deductions/limits/restrictions apply to both on-property and off-property (your car) theft
- Falling objects covered
- Damage from falling satellites, meteors, trees, planes
- Preventable damage is not covered so cover any gaping holes that were caused by the falling objects
- Loss of use covered
- When home is unusable due to covered losses, additional living expenses for hotels, rentals, food, transportation are covered – make sure to know time limits of coverage
- Smoke and soot damage to walls, carpets, furniture, clothing covered
- Natural disasters such as fires, windstorms, lightning, hail covered
- Roof damages caused by the weight of snow, ice, sleet, other natural disasters
- Auxiliary structures covered
- Most policies cover attached structures such as garages; some policies cover detached structures such as garage, storage sheds, fencing but usually at 10% lower than the main home structure
- Be sure to read the fine print!
- Flooding not covered
- Flood insurance is ONLY available through government sponsored programs AND there is a one month waiting period for those government run programs to kick in
- Think of the last several hurricane/flooding seasons!
- Earthquakes not covered
- Earthquake insurance IS available SEPARATELY
- States such as California sell earthquake insurance separately.