Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#1
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Home insurance deductible
A friend showed me his home owners insurance renewal. There was a new deductible of $15k for wind damage. Looks like it's an attempt of the insurance company to limit their exposure for new roofs for wind damage that has been happening in TV a lot lately.
It will be interesting to see if this is a trend. |
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#2
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Yes, fraud, but lot of starving lawyers out there.
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#3
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I don’t understand your post.
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Teach your daughter how to shoot, because a restraining order is just a piece of paper. |
#4
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Insurance is for what you can not afford...........base your deductibles accordingly.
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Identifying as Mr. Helpful |
#5
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Lawyers looking for lawsuits so as to make money. This is what I think he means.
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#6
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Quote:
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#7
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Most home owners have $500 or $1000 deductible. On a declared Hurricane your deductible is 2% of homes value. That what ours is.
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#8
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Sounds like insurance companies trying to stay in business. Too many call 1-800 fill in the blank lawyers. Someone has to pay and that is us, the consumer.
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Stay away from negative people, they have a problem for every solution -Albert Einstein |
#9
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hurricane wind deductible.
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#10
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But if you claim shingle damage from a storm, do insurance companies usually pay full replacement cost, minus the deductible, which might be only $500? So if someone is willing to climb onto your roof and certify that you have storm damage, you can file a claim and receive a new roof that might cost $25,000? You get this even though you live in a house that is 22 years old, and your shingles were 25 year shingles and were due to be replaced in the near future, paid for entirely by yourself. The damage by storm might be minimal and debatable, but maybe some lawyer is willing to threaten a law suit if your insurer won’t pay, and the insurer would rather pay than have to spend that much having its own lawyers defend it in court. I realize that with insurance, we essentially pool our money nationwide so those in need can get paid. I realize this is legal, but getting these new roofs seems rather close to insurance fraud. It saves us a LOT of money we probably don’t have (maybe more than we have paid for house insurance in our entire lives), but actually, usually our “storm-damaged” roofs are still working fine and not leaking. Are we sort-of making false claims and passing on the costs to our neighbors? Is this moral? Does it give anyone qualms? |
#11
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Ditto!
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Not understanding original post either! |
#12
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We have to have a new roof. When our adjuster showed up he blatantly said the roof should have been replaced several years ago. My hubby who KEEPS EVERYTHING, had the paperwork from Owens that they inspected the roof and it was fine. Evidently Owens was cherry picking homes to reroof, ours not being one. Same thing with my neighbor. Seems to me the fraud is with Owens Corning AND the building inspectors that we pay for through tax dollars. As far as I’m concerned my insurance company should go after Owens. One thing I know for sure INSURANCE COMPANIES DON’T PAY UNLESS THEY HAVE TO!!! So some are under the influences of the conspiracy theories that everyone including ADJUSTERS are dishonest and make big bucks off of this. My suggestion to them is to relook at who the fraudulent parties are. Anybody remember the siding debacle? Where were the inspectors when the homes were being built. That was our area too. Had to have an inspection for that too, so far the siding hasn’t blown off the house, thank goodness. By the way a house 20 year old home with a 25 yr roof, will not be paid for by insurance. The roof will be considered end of life. |
#13
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Last edited by rmd2; 08-26-2020 at 09:11 AM. Reason: spelling |
#14
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Is it possible to post the name of the alleged insurance company. Only a rumor until you post a name to go along with your accusations
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#15
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I disagree they pay only when they "have to". The policy is a contract. If something is covered by the policy/contract they are going to pay. Otherwise it is bad faith and that cost them a LOT more than paying claims they clearly owe based on the policy. I don't mean to come off defending Insurance companies but the reason Florida has marginal (and I'm being kind) insurance carriers is because all the lawsuits and unscrupulous contractors out there taking advantage. If writing an estimate large enough to cover your deductible isn't insurance fraud I don't know what is. Again, we are the ones paying for it in the end.
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Stay away from negative people, they have a problem for every solution -Albert Einstein |
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