Tag: Lakewood home insurance

Home Insurance and Named Perils vs All Risk Policies

I was talking with a person the other week about home insurance. They asked whether the policy I had proposed was a named peril or all risk, or open peril, policy. It’s an excellent question and one we should delve into to expand on last week’s post, The Three Home Insurance Form Types (see https://wiseinsurancegroup.com/three-home-insurance-form-types/).

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The Three Home Insurance Form Types

Insurance companies write home policies based on industry standard forms or policy types as outlined by the Insurance Standards Office. These standard forms are used to define how policies will be written and what coverage is included. There are 6 home insurance policy types including home, renters, and condo policies. This post, however, will focus on the 3 most common ones written in Texas

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Home Insurance and the Two Broad Policy Types

I’ve had a number of conversations with people about home insurance over the last few of weeks. Based on those conversations and the questions I’ve addressed, I wanted to write a series on the different types of home insurance policies to provide a foundation for home buyers and owners to reference.

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Mobile Home Insurance

A client called me a few weeks ago. We’ve written several insurance policies on some rental properties he and his wife own. They are all traditional single family homes in the Dallas / Fort Worth area. The conversation was interesting because they are looking at selling several of their properties and replacing them with mobile homes. I thought it would be interesting to write about mobile home insurance and how it’s similar yet different from a home insurance policy on a traditional home.

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Home Insurance and Short Term Rentals

In order to answer my question whether home insurance would cover a home on Airbnb or VRBO, I talked with underwriters from each of the companies I represent. Each underwriter gave me the same answer, that their home insurance policy would not cover a loss if the homeowner is providing temporary lodging via any of these services. The reason is there is too much risk exposure for the home insurance company for any type of loss.

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Duplex Insurance

I received a call last month from an investment property owner. He’d bought a duplex in Houston earlier this year as a rental property and had a question about the insurance he’d originally purchased from another agent. Even though he had only bought one side of the duplex, he’d been told most carriers required both sides be covered in order to write a duplex insurance policy. He wanted to know if that was correct.

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Would You Choose This Home Insurance Discount?

Home insurance companies provide a number of discounts. There are discounts for married couples, retired couples, homeowners with monitored alarms, new roofs, newer homes, updates to plumbing, electrical, and cooling systems, and for placing your car insurance with the same company too. In most cases, these discounts are given for something you do or have, not for giving something up. The home insurance discount Dave wrote about though was for something a policyholder gives up.

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Texas Wind Insurance

Most Texas homeowners never have to think about wind insurance, it’s included with their home policy. When you see the wind / hail deductible listed with an amount or percentage next to it, this indicates your home policy covers it. Those Texans who own homes along our Gulf Coast, however, do need to think about wind insurance. Many home insurance companies don’t include wind coverage so those homeowners have to look elsewhere for this coverage.

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Insurance Review for Hurricane Season

Tropical Storm Colin serves as a great reminder for Texas homeowners to take a few minutes to perform an insurance review that’s focused on hurricanes and the type of claims that occur. To help with that, let’s delineate who and what needs to be reviewed by tiers and the type of coverage.

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Hurricane Preparation for 2016

The 2016 hurricane season starts tomorrow. It runs from June 1 through the end of November. Some forecasters are predicting the 2016 season could be the biggest since 2012 with 10 to 16 tropical storms and 4 to 8 hurricanes with 1 to 4 reaching major storm status.

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