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“Homeowners Insurance Explained: Coverage, Exclusions, and Claims Process”

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Understanding Homeowners Insurance

Understanding Homeowners Insurance

Are you eager to help safeguard your biggest investment—your home—against risk? Homeowners insurance can help by protecting your home and belongings in the event of loss or damage. If a covered event occurs, such as a fire or burglary, you can file a home insurance claim and receive payment to help cover the losses. Here’s what you should know about how homeowners insurance works.

What Is Homeowners Insurance?

Home insurance provides financial protection against damage to your home and its contents. The payout from homeowners insurance can enable you to repair or rebuild your home and replace damaged or stolen possessions. Most home insurance also covers legal and medical expenses if visitors are injured on your property or a family member injures someone or damages property outside your home. Finally, homeowners insurance typically helps pay your living expenses if your home is uninhabitable during repairs for a covered loss.

What Does Homeowners Insurance Cover?

The most common type of home insurance is an HO-3 policy, which includes four types of coverage:

  • Home structure coverage: Pays to repair or rebuild your home if it’s damaged or destroyed by fire, smoke, wind, hail, lightning, theft, vandalism, and certain types of water damage. Other structures on your property, such as a detached garage, gazebo, or shed, are usually covered too.
  • Personal possessions coverage: Pays to replace belongings such as furniture, appliances, clothing, and electronics if they’re damaged, destroyed, or stolen, either in your home or outside, such as in a storage space.
  • Liability coverage: Pays medical expenses if a visitor to your home is injured. It also covers legal costs arising from the incident. Outside your property, liability insurance covers injury your family members cause to other people or their property.
  • Additional living expenses (ALE) coverage: Pays some costs of living somewhere else while your home is being repaired or rebuilt after a covered loss.

What Is Not Covered by Homeowners Insurance?

Standard home insurance won’t cover every hazard that might befall your home. Here’s what homeowners insurance doesn’t cover:

  • Damage due to floods, earthquakes, sinkholes, or landslides.
  • Damage from sewer, septic tank, or drain backups or sump pump failures.
  • Routine wear and tear to your home.
  • Losses above policy limits.
  • Losses due to unusual events such as war, government seizure, pollution, infestation, or your intentional actions.

Is Homeowners Insurance Required?

Homeowner’s insurance isn’t required by law. However, as a condition of approving your mortgage application, lenders generally require carrying at least enough home insurance to pay off the loan. By ensuring you have the money to repair or rebuild after a covered incident, home insurance protects the asset that secures the loan—your home. Home insurance is so important to lenders that they’ll monitor whether you are paying your insurance premiums or, in some cases, roll your premium payments into your mortgage payments.

How to File a Homeowners Insurance Claim

When filing a home insurance claim, you can help speed the process by following these steps:

  1. Call the police if a burglary, vandalism, or other crime occurred. The insurance company will need a police report to support your claim.
  2. Contact the insurance carrier. In most cases, you can either call the company or start a claim online. Once your claim is filed, you’ll be assigned a claim number and a claims adjuster.
  3. Document the loss. Resist the urge to clean up until you’ve photographed and taken videos of any damage. Make a list of items that were lost, stolen, or damaged.
  4. Make urgent repairs. If you need to act immediately to prevent further damage, such as boarding up a broken window after a burglary, go ahead. Just be sure to document these stopgap repairs with photos and keep receipts for any repair materials you buy or work you pay to have done.
  5. Get estimates. Gather quotes for repairing or rebuilding your home from several licensed contractors. This information can help the insurance company determine the cost.
  6. Receive your payout, minus your deductible. The insurance company may pay for your loss in one of several ways.

Contact O1ne Mortgage for Your Mortgage Needs

At O1ne Mortgage, we understand the importance of protecting your home and ensuring you have the right coverage. If you have any questions or need assistance with your mortgage, please call us at 213-732-3074. Our team of experts is here to help you with all your mortgage service needs.



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