|
|
|
Myth: They are looking to insure the house for the cost of the home, assuming that if the house is lost in a catastrophe, they would be remunerated. Fact: In the event that your house burns down or is destroyed and you are paid the purchase amount of your home, the amount of money you would recover would be the cost of the ENTIRE PROPERTY. This means that you would receive a check for the cost of the Home and the Land.You would therefore have enough money to rebuild your house plus the value of the land left over. In this scenario you would be able to rebuild a much larger home. In metropolitan areas where land value is excessively high, or where you have a large parcel of land, you would be able to build a much larger house resulting in a larger completed home value. In other words you would profit from an insurance claim, which, by law is illegal. Payment of an insurance claim is an indemnification transaction, not a profiting one. Myth: They are looking to insure the home for the Mortgage Amount or Loan Amount. Fact: Like the previous scenario, if you are in an area where the land values are high, the mortgage amount could easily exceed the cost to rebuild the home. This, like the prior example, places you in a situation where you may potentially profit from a loss.
Myth: My Mortgage Broker or Loan Officer told me I need to insure the house for the amount of the loan. Fact: A Mortgage broker, Loan officer or bank requiring you to insure your home for more than the cost to rebuild is not only frivolous, it is a Violation of State Banking Law and Federal Banking Law to Require you to Insure your Dwelling for More than the Cost to Replace it or Rebuild it, this is also referred to as the cost of the improvements. Click here for a copy of theIf a mortgage company denies a loan when you are insuring your home for replacement cost and not insuring the home for the loan amount, they are subject to fines and penalties. Feel free to print a copy of the law to take with you to the mortgage closing.
Myth: I should replace my previous policy with one that has the same exact coverage. Fact: No, you should not, now is the perfect time to reevaluate what coverage you have. If you purchased your home 20 years ago, chances are, if your insurance agent was looking out for your best interest, they included an Inflation Guard on your home insurance policy. What an Inflation Guard is, is a method of annually increasing your coverages to account for increases in labor costs and material costs. If you can imagine a home in 1960 costing $30,000, including the land, insured for $25,000, 40 years later, without any substantial upgrades outside of routine maintenance, the home may very well be worth $500,000, and $250,000 to replace. Without an inflation guard in place, the home would still be insured for $25,000, barely enough to replace a kitchen these days. However with an inflation guard in place of about 5%, that $25,000 would now be $176,000. Because of periods of time where material costs, labor costs, and inflation may have been out of line with the inflation guard like between 1999 and 2005, after many years, because of compounding multiplicities, your coverage may be way out of line with your coverage needs. In addition to inflation there is another home insurance coverage gap to consider. Despite our agency often sending out renewal questionnaires asking if any upgrades, extensions, dormers or renovations have been performed, people rarely reply. If you have renovated, expanded or upgraded your home have you increased your coverage to protect that investment? Many times home owners add rooms, bathrooms, renovate kitchens or add wings or floors without considering the impact it may have on rendering their homes grossly under insured.
Call A The best resource for determining how much you should insure your house for is someone that represents the company that will be insuring it, They under stand how home insurance works, they understand home insurance valuations and they understand the coverages. An Experienced Home Insurance agent that cares about what may be your biggest investment and biggest asset should take the time to walk you through a Home Replacement Cost Estimator. If an appraisal has been completed for your home, there should be a section that shows some replacement costs. There should be a cost approach figure, which is usually the loan amount and means nothing. There should be a depreciated value figure, which is what the depreciated materials are currently worth, this relates to actual cash value, and should not be a factor for you unless you plan to demolish the house. There should be a Cost of Home New figure, which if based on solid and standard methodology, should be the replacement cost. If the notes indicate "Based on various information" don't rely on it, ask your home insurance agent for an Replacement Cost Estimator evaluation.