Answers

Home owner’s insurance for condominium house?

Posted by Answers Community

I live in a housing complex in a condominium. I have taken home owner's insurance policy as required by mortgage company. Recently my insurance company informed me that they are removing ' earth quake ' coverage from policy from next renewal cycle as it is not economical to the insurance company.

My questions are –

a) As general rule what kind of insurance one should take. I mean – fire, theft, flood, earth quake, tornado, hurricane, twister etc.
b) what monetary coverage one should go for ? I mean say house is of 300,000 value.
c) If the present company does not give earth quake coverage, then should I consider going to other company.
d) Can any one give some ideal what will be the premium per year for getting all above coverage for 300,000 value house.
I have read the answers of – mbrcatz17, hi91977 and harrell1956. Thanks,
But my questions still unanswered are -

a) Should I take coverage for Earth quake, Hurricane, Twister, Tornado and flood. I live in new jersey. It is not flood zone area.

b) I existing premium is 300 $/year for Fire, earthquake, hurricane but without flood. Now my company is removing Earth quake and said it will save $ 17 /year. If I go to another insurance company what will it cost appx. for earth quake coverage ? And should I go for it or not ?

This entry was posted and filed under Home Insurance.

Related Questions and Answers/Posts

Answers/Comments & Trackbacks

1 Answer/Comment »

Comment by mbrcatz
2009-06-10 15:45:53

1. As a general rule, in the states that allow it you should take an HO6 policy – for condo owners. It's pretty broad. If you live in an earthquake or flood zone, you'll have to balance out your risk vs. the master policy coverage vs. your loan agreement vs. how much you can afford to lose. In hurricane prone areas, frequently you have seperate wind coverage, NOT built into the standard policy.

2. impossible to tell without reading your bylaws. You need to know how much of the structure YOU are responsible for – studs in? drywall in? paint in?? and how much the master policy deductible is (you need at LEAST that much in building coverage)

3. Yes. But that doesn't mean it's going to be easy to get.

4. No. If you're in Florida, it could be $6,000. If you're in Iowa, it could be $300. Plus it's based on your credit score and claims history.

You really need to sit down with your agent and go over all these things with them. Bring a copy of your bylaws, so they don't have to guess.

 
Name (required)
E-mail (required - never shown publicly)
URI
Subscribe to comments via email
Your Comment (smaller size | larger size)
You may use <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong> in your comment.

Trackback responses to this post


 

 
Copyright © 2005 - by ArticleSphere™ All Rights Reserved.
All Trademarks and Servicemarks are the property of the respective owners.