Archive for the ‘Home insurance’ Category

Home insurance and earthquake coverage

Have you felt the earth moving on 26th February, 2008? If you felt the earthquake that night a year ago, or not, since then the UK home insurers have received tons of claims related to the damages brought by it.

In contrast to the floods of last summer, when lots of homeowners didn’t get their coverage for the damage, leading providers state that most home insurances will be covered for the earthquake damages. In case you have also suffered the property damages, the Association of British Insurers provides several advices to assist you on getting your coverage fast without the noise.

Contact your insurance provider as fast as you can

The sooner you contact your provider, the faster they may get an appraiser to value the damage. As well, contact your home insurance company to learn the exact procedures that must be followed. Some companies might have set up a process to proceed with the payouts faster, due to the large amount of claims related to the recent earthquake. Read the rest of this entry »

The exclusions on all-perils policies

When you are looking around for a house to buy, the cost of home insurance is not always the most important thought on your mind. Even if you do think about it, the most common consideration is the state of repair and how easy it would be to repair or rebuild should there be a fire. This confidence continues when buying the insurance policy. You sign up for an all-perils policy and take the words at face value. If you are insured against all perils, that surely means you can sleep peacefully at night. Except that confidence is too often misplaced. Looking around the US right now, it’s one of the coldest winters on record with heavier snow fall than usual. When the weather warms, the melting snow will flood into the rivers… That’s a joy to come. So let’s list the most common events that damage your home: landslides, subsidence, floods, hurricanes and tornadoes. Live in the wrong states and we add earthquakes. Now take out your policy and check that exclusion clause. You will see some mysterious phrases like “surface water”. That excludes every possible source of water no matter whether it comes in as a high tide, wind surge, rain or local sewage drains backing up. When you add up everything not included, even the top-of-the-range policies from the supposedly best insurers often end up as covering rebuilding costs from fire and wind only – that’s wind and not tornadoes or hurricanes. Read the rest of this entry »