Home Owners Insurance - Learn More And Save Money
The family insurance portfolio usually always includes some form
of property insurance. The homeowner policy has been around a
long time and is purchased every time a family purchases a new
home. Homeowner's insurance is very comprehensive coverage but
is very often misunderstood. The typical homeowner always has
some kind of maintenance problem. These kinds of problems are
sometimes submitted as claims on their homeowner's insurance.
That is where the misunderstanding begins. Homeowner's policies
protect you against losses caused by perils. Maintenance and
deterioration problems are never covered by your home policy.
Your homeowner's policy would become unaffordable if that were
the case.
Perils Insured Against - Fire or lightning, windstorm or hail,
explosion, riot and civil commotion, aircraft, smoke, vandalism,
theft, falling objects, the weight of ice sleet and snow,
accidental discharge of water or steam, freezing, volcanic
eruption, and more. These are the basic perils covered by most
home policies.
Homeowner Policy Structure
Section A - The Dwelling - This provides coverage for the
dwelling and any structures attached to that dwelling.
Section B - Other Structures - This provides coverage for
detached structures like garages, storage sheds, flag poles,
fences, and swimming pools.
Section C - Personal Property - Personal property provides
coverage for personal property owned by the insured anywhere in
the world. There are limitations on certain types of personal
property
Section D - Loss of Use - This coverage refers to the additional
living expense that the insured incurs when the dwelling becomes
uninhabitable because of a peril covered in the policy.
The perils and the policy structure are the essentials that you
need to study when purchasing a homeowners policy. Replacement
cost verses actual cash value is the next consideration. These
are the two methods that insurance companies use to settle
claims. The actual cash value method will rebuild your dwelling
or replace your property by taking the replacement value and
subtracting the depreciation. Replacement Cost will replace your
dwelling or personal property with material of like kind and
quality without depreciation.