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Fall 2006 |
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BROWSE
PAST ISSUES
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Protecting Your Possessions
Understand the fine print before disaster strikes.
If anything, I suspected that my husband and I
had over-insured our life's limited possessions.
After all, we paid plenty for homeowners and auto
insurance. We'd even purchased an umbrella
policy to kick in once other coverage limits had
been exceeded.
It didn't take long, though, for a few insurance
experts to highlight holes in our so-called safety
net. Two critical questions we were asked to consider
seriously included:
- Were our home's possessions insured
at their replacement cost or simply their current
aging value? I didn't know. And
- Were we protected if the delivery guy slipped
while dropping off a package at my home-based
business? Well, no.
Determining what coverage you need is only half
the equation. Shop around—aggressively. "You
can easily pay double for exactly the same product
from one company to another," says J. Robert
Hunter, director of insurance for the Consumer Federation
of America, a consumer advocacy organization.
Some Key Decisions to Make
- Determine your home's replacement
cost: If your home is severely damaged,
rebuilding may cost you more than selling it
today, says Don Griffin, vice president of personal
lines at the Property Casualty Insurers Association
of America, a trade group. Particularly for
older homes, the necessary materials may be
costly. And policies often don't
cover the changes needed to meet current building
codes. Ask about that additional coverage,
he says.
- Protect your possessions' true
value: Check that your homeowners policy covers replacement
costs, rather than only what your valuables
are worth today, insurance experts say. Scrutinize
coverage limits for paintings, jewelry, and
other pricey items, Griffin says. If they are
insufficient, consider purchasing a rider to
cover those, he says. One way to estimate the
total value of your home's contents is
to first calculate the cost of big-ticket items
like furniture, appliances, and electronics,
says Jack Hungelmann, a Minneapolis-area insurance
agent and the author of Insurance for Dummies.
Then take that number, he says, and double
it.
- Consider flood insurance: Even
an inch of water in your home can be devastating.
About 25 percent of claims are filed in regions
of the country at low to moderate flood risk,
according to the National Flood Insurance Program.
Policies can be obtained for as low as $112
annually, they say.
- Take liability seriously: For the majority of people, your liability limits
should be high enough that you're not worried
about running out of coverage, Hungelmann says.
Keep in mind that homeowners policies typically
exclude any business-related lawsuits. By purchasing
a rider, you're protected if an injury
occurs on your home premises, even if your home
is only occasionally used for business, he says.
- Check out umbrella policies: To boost peace of mind, consider an umbrella policy
of
$1 million or more, suggests Hungelmann. "One
of the single greatest values in the insurance business
is the personal umbrella policy," he says.
A $1 million policy can run as little as $200 to
$300, Griffin estimates. In return, the policy provides
$1 million of coverage on top of your home and auto
limits. For example, if you're sued for $800,000
following an automobile accident and your auto
coverage limit is $300,000, the umbrella will kick
in for the extra $500,000.
- Scrutinize your deductibles: Feel like your insurance bills are stacking up?
One often-missed way to cut premiums is to increase
your deductible. If you can absorb it, consider
setting your home and auto deductibles at $1,000,
Hungelmann says. Hunter agrees. "You don't
want to file claims anyway," says Hunter,
a former Texas insurance commissioner. "Especially
in auto insurance—they'll raise your
rates most every time you file a claim."
Charlotte Huff is a writer from Fort Worth, Texas,
who specializes in health and business issues.
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