Check your policy: Some insurers already pushing home insurance plans with reduced roof coverage [South Florida Sun-Sentinel]
Will your home insurance policy pay to fully replace your roof if it’s damaged in a hailstorm, a tornado, a fire, or by a falling tree branch during a summer thunderstorm?
Or does your policy cover only your roof’s depreciated value, leaving you on the hook to pay thousands — perhaps tens of thousands of dollars — if you suddenly need a new one?
It might be time to check. Several insurers have been offering reduced roof coverage as an option over the past two years. And you might have unwittingly elected that option at your last renewal if you were seeking the lowest possible price and didn’t ask your agent to carefully explain how that was calculated.
Soon, you might not have much choice. A recently filed state
Insurers say the downgrade is necessary to keep insurance affordable if your roof is more than 10 years old and you need to insure your structure, contents and personal liability.
But reducing your coverage could become a problem for you and the bank that owns your mortgage loan. Chances are, the contract you signed when you agreed to your loan requires you to maintain full replacement coverage for everything that could go wrong with your house.
A question of survival
Insurers and their supporters say they have little choice. Florida’s home insurance market is in crisis, with most companies in the state reporting operating losses over the past five years, thanks to excessive claims and litigation.
The culprits, insurers say, are a small number of large roofing contractors and the attorneys that work for them. They’ve been exploiting a
Contractors dispatch teams to canvass neighborhoods, asking homeowners to let them inspect their roofs. If they find damage, they search old weather reports for a storm that could have caused the damage, then pinpoint it in an insurance claim demanding full payment for a new roof, often at inflated prices. If insurers balk at the claims, attorneys are standing by to litigate on roofers’ behalf.
Insurers say the practice is killing their industry and driving consumer costs to unsustainable levels. Some consumers say their insurance costs more than their mortgage loan each month.
Three insurers —
Meanwhile, several insurers are expected to declare insolvency because they won’t have enough reserves to to purchase required levels of reinsurance prior to the
To remain solvent, insurers have two choices, says
They’ve been raising prices. Now they’re seeking to cut coverage, Handerhan said.
The depreciated roof proposal, part of a larger insurance bill filed by
Exceptions would be roofs less than 10 years old, which would still be covered for full replacement cost, roofs that must be replaced if the structure is declared a total loss, and damage sustained in a hurricane named by the
The proposal cleared the Banking and Insurance committee by a 9-2 vote on
Would lenders allow coverage downgrade?
Insurance agents contacted by the
Those terms are dictated to lenders by federal mortgage guarantors, including
Spokespersons for
He told Boyd that other states enacted laws allowing insurers to offer actual cash value coverage, rather than replacement coverage, for various risks, and generated no opposition from Fannie and Freddie. But those states were not as populated as
DiMarco said he reached out to officials of Fannie and Freddie for clarification on their policy but “we can’t get a straight answer.” He added, “We have concerns that yes, the homeowner could be out of compliance if they are not insured for replacement costs. We are trying to track it down.”
Boyd said the Legislature and insurance industry wouldn’t allow homeowners to be put “in jeopardy with their mortgages” if Fannie and Freddie announced that borrowers without full replacement coverage would face negative consequences.
“Presumably, [that would mean] insurance companies would not be able to offer those coverages,” he said. “but we are paying attention to it for sure.”
At this point, there’s no guarantee that Boyd’s bill will be enacted this year, or even come up for a vote before the full Legislature before the session ends on
Many insurers offering ‘option’
But some insurance companies have already sought and received authorization to offer depreciated roof coverage on an optional basis.
One of the nation’s largest insurers, Progressive Home, emailed agents in December to announce that its depreciated roof coverage endorsement would be automatically included as the default option in policy quotes.
Progressive owns several insurance companies operating in
Progressive spokesman
“However, if they choose Replacement Cost Coverage, for homes with roofs 11 years or older, a roof inspection must be done within 30 days to ensure the policy will meet our underwriting guidelines,” he said.
But
Many policyholders, she said, simply ask their agent to find them the least expensive coverage option and “the agent says, ‘sign here, here and here’ and they sign it.”
More than ever, Dominguez said, insurance customers need to ask their agent questions and carefully read their policies to ensure they understand what coverages they have — and what they don’t have. Waiting until they need to file a claim can become an expensive mistake, she said.
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