Homeowner's Insurance Information
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A homeowners' insurance
policy covers both property and liability. It is a total
financial plan that protects your home, personal property, and
personal liability. It is designed to pay for damages to your
home and its contents. It can also protect you from financial
liability if someone is injured on your property. A
homeowners' insurance policy also protects you and your
possessions when you are away from home. Basically, it extends
to all your possessions no matter where you are.
Although most homeowners' insurance policies are standardized throughout the United States,
there are different policies sold through hundreds of insurance
companies. Most policies cover damage to both
the structure of your home, as well as personal
property, caused by many natural disasters, including fire, lightening,
hail, explosions, smoke, theft, and falling objects. Since almost everything
is covered in homeowners' insurance, it is more important
to understand what is not covered. The only standard catastrophes
that are not covered in a homeowners' insurance policy are
floods and earthquake damage.
To determine how much loss has occurred, the insurance
company may use one of the following two most common methods
-- actual cash value and replacement coverage. Actual cash
value is the cost of replacing damaged or destroyed property
with comparable new property, minus depreciation. Replacement
coverage is the cost of replacing an item with one of the same
kind and quality, equivalent to the actual cash value, minus
physical depreciation. The objective is to place the insured
in the same financial position after a loss as prior to it. If
your policy does not already include replacement coverage, you
can add this to your policy for an increase in premium
payments. Call your insurance company or agent for more
information.
Homeowners' insurance only covers the structure of your
home, not the land on which it stands. Therefore, your policy
should be for the value of your
home.
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