Flood insurance

Chasey_Lane

Salt Life
So sorry to hear that, I hope everything works out :huggy:

Natiowide or Allstate?

We have had A LOT of clients who have their auto here but the H/O w/ one of them come in super angry because they had no idea their deductible would be 2% because of the hurricane.
I'm one of those people!! :howdy: My own fault for not knowing what my coverage was; and I inquired after the storm to see what I had. I'm with Nationwide BTW.
 

Chasey_Lane

Salt Life
Statefarm :buddies:


:frown: Hopefully you didnt have any damage!:love:
Nope, none. Not even any flooding and my sump pump was off a full day (I didn't hook the generator to it). I have a walk-up basement too, and I was incredibly lucky my basement didn't flood.

We have trees on our property, but they're far enough back that even if they did fall they wouldn't hit anything.
 

PrepH4U

New Member
That doesnt always work unfortunately.

So sorry to hear that, I hope everything works out :huggy:

Natiowide or Allstate?

We have had A LOT of clients who have their auto here but the H/O w/ one of them come in super angry because they had no idea their deductible would be 2% because of the hurricane.

Nope, $$$Travelers $$$ :lol:
 
Nope, $$$Travelers $$$ :lol:

I had Travelers too for years and years, recently switched to Eerie. Travelers pizzed me off more than once.

Had a tree fall on a shed. Adjuster came out, negotiated a price, got a check. Great! Then I get the update: there was a surcharge added to my premium for the next 3 years. The cost of the premium exceeded the value of the check they wrote. Had I know that, I would not have filed a claim.

Had an accident with the truck. 1st accident since I was 18 (now almost 60). No points, no accidents, no claims, clean records all around, same insurance for over 25 years. Within a month of the accident my rates went up. No forgiveness, no review, just a significant increase.

Went to Eerie, got more coverage for less money in spite of the accident.
 

daylily

no longer CalvertNewbie
I'm one of those people!! :howdy: My own fault for not knowing what my coverage was; and I inquired after the storm to see what I had. I'm with Nationwide BTW.

I'm in the same boat. Luckily I didn't need to use my homeowners insurance for any damage from this hurricane. But what many people seem to be going through lately is making me take a closer look at my policy contract for possible exclusions, higher deductibles than anticipated, etc. I need to call my SF agent to clarify a few things too. Don't want to be screwed in the event I ever need to file a claim. We all need to know what our policies do and do not cover.

A friend of ours in VA just found out the hard way that his septic system was damaged by the recent earthquake. Someone told him his policy may not include earthquake coverage. So there's another question I add to my list for when I talk to my agent. :smile:
 

getbent

Thats how them b*tch's R
Sump pumps have nothing to do with water getting into your house, They only get it out after it gets in.

Sorry if I wasn't clear. The sump pump failed due to power outage. The crawl space under the house filled with water. Her laundry area seems to be lower than the rest of the house so when the water rose, it came up into the laundry area. Make sense?
 

Bavarian

New Member
I called Ins Agent since we have about10 big trees down, roof damage, and 2' water in basement when power failed. Heard that now the water damage would be covered, only the tree across the driveway which I already cut to get out of house for Mass.
Then heard about 1% hurricane deductible, so even though the main heat pump, still under warranty, needs an expensive circuit board, not enough with the $5K plus deductible. Good news and bad news.

Travelers.
 
What would you say to all the people that have exterior basement steps leading down to a below ground landing at the basement door?

And would you believe that at the bottom of those steps is a drain that is piped directly to the sump pump underneath the slab?

Now we'll let you explain what happens when rain water is running into that drain and the sump pump isn't working?

:whistle:
Let's see if I can help... Sump pumps have nothing to do with water getting in... their job it to get water out. It's the job of the contractor to direct water away from the house or to a collective area that is handled by a sump pump. It is the responsiblity of the homeowner to ensure the sump pump remains operational. Ground flooding isn't usually covered under a normal policy. It is the responsiblity of the homeowner to get the additional insurance necessary to cover damage that could be caused by flooding and/or pump failures.
 
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