BourbonRunner
Well-Known Member
@ShadowsPapa is correct- location is a massive influence on premiums.
@GeneralMaximus Our State Farm homeowner's policy did go up $300 over last year. We did have a dog bite claim last year but that wasn't the entire culprit- SF and every other insurer have been raising rates to coincide with the inflation in the general market, housing market, and to cover losses paid out in California and the Gulf Coast. And-- Until the NFIP gets funded by Congress expect to see more of the same annually.
Additionally: State Farm is no longer underwriting homeowners policies in California and not issuing new car insurance as of earlier this year. that may play into our increases, too. Less consumers in the market makes the spread out costs go up. Dunno about other insurers.
The key takeaway is to understand entire insurance industry is predicated on acceptable risk, IE: Your premium is tied to how much risk the company is willing to take on for your actions/behavior/environment.
In my teens in the ancient 1990's my insurance was substantially higher than my female friends. Supposedly young males are the highest risk for auto accidents/claims, and as a result I paid more annually. At 21 I bought a brand new VW Jetta 1.8T. Payment was $325/month and my insurance was $400 /m with $1000 deductibles and 2 not-at-fault accidents before I turned 20 (rear ended and t-boned). Oops. May not have been my fault but I fit the description.
Once I hit 25-26 that rate dropped substantially. In my mid 40's i currently pay $400 a month for 3 vehicles, $1M umbrella policy for PI and loss, and full comprehensive with $150 deductibles on all three. BTW, without any claims due to increasing theft in the area, my premiums went up recently $40/month to $400.
On the home side, insurers now are asking questions about the age of the roof, cooking/heating appliances, fireplace use and condition, specific dog breeds, etc to line item those things should there be a loss.
IE: If you declare the roof is 15 years old and suddenly a Delta overflight drops a Boeing bomb on it, don't expect to get the full replacement value- nay, it is the replacement less a 15 year depreciation... much like OP's original issue.
The worst is they're asking for buyer's home inspection reports. Any way they can weasel out of a potential claim. I can see it now-- Inspector says on page 14 the cover plate is missing from this outlet, your electrical fire claim is disallowed...
@GeneralMaximus Our State Farm homeowner's policy did go up $300 over last year. We did have a dog bite claim last year but that wasn't the entire culprit- SF and every other insurer have been raising rates to coincide with the inflation in the general market, housing market, and to cover losses paid out in California and the Gulf Coast. And-- Until the NFIP gets funded by Congress expect to see more of the same annually.
Additionally: State Farm is no longer underwriting homeowners policies in California and not issuing new car insurance as of earlier this year. that may play into our increases, too. Less consumers in the market makes the spread out costs go up. Dunno about other insurers.
The key takeaway is to understand entire insurance industry is predicated on acceptable risk, IE: Your premium is tied to how much risk the company is willing to take on for your actions/behavior/environment.
In my teens in the ancient 1990's my insurance was substantially higher than my female friends. Supposedly young males are the highest risk for auto accidents/claims, and as a result I paid more annually. At 21 I bought a brand new VW Jetta 1.8T. Payment was $325/month and my insurance was $400 /m with $1000 deductibles and 2 not-at-fault accidents before I turned 20 (rear ended and t-boned). Oops. May not have been my fault but I fit the description.
Once I hit 25-26 that rate dropped substantially. In my mid 40's i currently pay $400 a month for 3 vehicles, $1M umbrella policy for PI and loss, and full comprehensive with $150 deductibles on all three. BTW, without any claims due to increasing theft in the area, my premiums went up recently $40/month to $400.
On the home side, insurers now are asking questions about the age of the roof, cooking/heating appliances, fireplace use and condition, specific dog breeds, etc to line item those things should there be a loss.
IE: If you declare the roof is 15 years old and suddenly a Delta overflight drops a Boeing bomb on it, don't expect to get the full replacement value- nay, it is the replacement less a 15 year depreciation... much like OP's original issue.
The worst is they're asking for buyer's home inspection reports. Any way they can weasel out of a potential claim. I can see it now-- Inspector says on page 14 the cover plate is missing from this outlet, your electrical fire claim is disallowed...
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