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In reply to the discussion: The Home-Insurance Coin Flip: Nearly Half of Claims Result in Zero Payout [View all]sarisataka
(22,869 posts)38. It pays to spend a little time with an agent to understand what your insurance is covering
Too often people want to pay the smallest amount they can get away with so accept large deductibles and skip optional coverages.
Often there is very little difference in cost to have a lower deductible which can save thousands if a claim is filed.
Many base policies offered now are very bare bones, but optional add-ons are available for very little cost. Having your roof covered at replacement value rather than a depreciated value can be tens of thousands of dollars after a hailstorm. Water damage is often excluded in base policies but can be added for a couple dollars a month to cover the second most common HO claim insurance companies receive.
Insurance is expensive, so know what it is you are paying for.
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The Home-Insurance Coin Flip: Nearly Half of Claims Result in Zero Payout [View all]
mahatmakanejeeves
Yesterday
OP
If a customer has a question, that sets off an alarm with those mother-f6ckers
wolfie001
Yesterday
#3
You can't even have them check to see if your roof is okay after a hail storm.
moreland01
21 hrs ago
#40
Umm... that reticence runs throughout the entirety of the insurance racket.
OldBaldy1701E
Yesterday
#4
THE BIG FIVE: These are the biggest offenders. New Jersey's Department of Insurance listed companies with
3Hotdogs
Yesterday
#5
Another insurance rip-offs are the health insurance clubs that are not insurance. They are not rated by state agencies
3Hotdogs
Yesterday
#7
"I don't understand why people post shit nobody without a subscription (to the WSJ, no less) can read."
mahatmakanejeeves
Yesterday
#19
We just dumped USAA (after 70 years with several generations of my family)
moreland01
21 hrs ago
#41
Too often, when someone files a homeowners claim their policy is not renewed by the insurer
dlk
Yesterday
#22
I had a water claim a few years back. All the basements on my block flooded because a storm drain behind our
Raftergirl
Yesterday
#24
I have also had a recent experience with Nationwide (luckily) and they have been remarkable
FakeNoose
Yesterday
#28
Great to hear this and good luck with the rebuilding! Can't imagine going through something like that with
Raftergirl
Yesterday
#35
'22 or '23. But I have this specific coverage in my policy. As another poster wrote, it only costs an extra couple
Raftergirl
19 hrs ago
#45
Like a good little drone, I've been paying house insurance premiums since 1978,
BobTheSubgenius
Yesterday
#27
It pays to spend a little time with an agent to understand what your insurance is covering
sarisataka
23 hrs ago
#38