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HOMEOWNER’S
INSURANCE: Protect Yourself
| Few
people can afford to replace the loss of their home. Therefore, homeowner’s
insurance can offer valuable protection. |
Also
known as "fire insurance", a typical homeowner's insurance package covers
the home and its contents from loss by fire, theft, and other specified
perils such as lightening, wind damage, flood, explosions, vehicle impact,
vandalism, and so on. It also includes public liability protection against
injury to other people while they are on your property.
Be sure that your
homeowner’s insurance protects you. Don’t get stuck with a policy that
over-insures, underinsures, or doesn’t meet your needs.
How
much coverage do you need?
To determine
how much coverage you need, find out the insurable value of the building
only. You only want to insure the building . . . not the land. If your
house burns to the ground, the land will still be there.
Your insurance broker
can estimate your home’s insurable value. Also, if you have a mortgage,
the lender will have done a mortgage assessment. You can ask your lender
for a breakdown of the assessment. It will tell you how much of your home’s
value is for the building only.
If you live in a
condominium townhouse or apartment, the exterior or common parts of the
building are usually insured by the condominium corporation. You are required
to insure the interior and its contents. Check with your condominium manager
to be sure what coverage they provide and what you must provide.
The next step is
to choose between regular coverage and replacement coverage. Replacement
coverage costs a bit more but it covers you to rebuild the house at current
prices. Regular coverage pays only the depreciated value of the building.
This will not cover the full cost to replace or repair the house. When
you consider the cost of coverage and the cost to rebuild a house, it is
usually wiser to go with a replacement policy.
Homeowner’s
insurance and your mortgage lender
Mortgage
lenders have a special interest in homeowner's insurance. It pays the loan
if the building is destroyed. For this reason, mortgage contracts include
a clause (usually called a loss payable clause) that gives lenders first
claim to insurance money to cover the outstanding loan. If the mortgage
amount is greater than the insurable value of the house, the lender can
insist that you take out insurance on the value of the mortgage. In other
words, you’ll pay for more insurance than is needed to replace the house.
What
happens when the mortgage is greater than the value of the house?
Donna and
Murray bought a house for $180,000.00. The lot is appraised at $70,000.00
and the building at $110,000.00. Therefore, the insurable value of the
building is $110,00.00. In order to buy the house, they needed a mortgage
of $125,000.00. As the mortgage is $15,000.00 more than the insurable value
of the building, Donna and Murray must pay for $15,000.00 worth of extra
insurance.
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How can
you avoid paying for more insurance than you need? Before you make an offer
to buy a house, make sure you can keep the mortgage at or below the insurable
value of the building.
Example Calculation
| Estimated
selling price of house |
$120,000 |
| Subtract
your down payment |
$ 40,000 |
| Amount
of needed mortgage |
$
60,000 |
| Insurable
value of building |
$ 70,000 |
| Subtract
mortgage |
$ 60,000 |
|
|
| Difference
between insurable value and mortgage |
$
10,000 |
You want
to get a positive number. A positive number means the house's insurable
value is greater than the mortgage. A negative number means that the house's
insurable value is less than the mortgage and you will need more insurance
than is needed to replace the house.
Contents
In addition
to building coverage, a homeowner's insurance package will cover the contents
(furniture, clothing, equipment, and other personal property). Generally,
a basic package covers what you would need to start over again if everything
burned or blew up. If you want to protect things like stamp, coin, or jewellery
collections, you’ll need additional coverage. Or, just keep these valuables
in a safety deposit box. It’s less expensive.
To get enough coverage
(but not more than you need), list your possessions by description and
value (keep sales receipts if you have them). Keep this information in
an off-site safety deposit box to prevent loss in case of fire.
Liability
insurance
Finally,
your homeowner’s insurance package will include liability insurance. This
protects you from the ruin of a visitor's fateful fall on the front steps.
By the laws of most lands, you are responsible for the safety of other
people while they are on your property. If anyone is injured, even though
you took no deliberate action to cause the injury, you could be sued. Ask
your broker to recommend the appropriate amount of liability coverage.
In a world of lawsuits, there is little risk of having too much liability
insurance when compared to the risk of having too little.
Keep
your coverage up to date
If you increase
or decrease the value of your property, (such as by an addition or demolition
of some of the building or its attachments), remember to update your insurance
policy. Avoid the risk of too little coverage or the cost of too much.
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