Coverage From Rising Waters
While homeowner and renter policies can cover your home if the plumbing bursts while you’re at work, you’ll need flood insurance for assistance after nature-borne flooding. As we discussed in the past, this is different from the windstorm insurance that addresses the hammering your home can take from hurricane and tornado gusts. If you live on the coastline or in another high-risk area, you may have been required to carry flood coverage if you have a government-backed mortgage.
Still, 40% of National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) flood insurance claims between 2014 and 2018 came from properties that were not in high-risk areas. While you can check the FEMA website to see if you fall in a high-risk zone, recent years show how extreme weather can penetrate many regions previously considered less vulnerable.
Sometimes disaster assistance is made available through FEMA, but that only occurs following a Presidential Disaster Declaration, which doesn’t always happen. And those who carry flood insurance may receive substantially more aid. Remember, disaster assistance is not intended to make you whole, just get you back on your feet again. Also, with flood insurance, you don’t have to wait for a declaration of disaster to receive help.
Obtaining Flood Insurance
The NFIP is managed by FEMA and serves more than 23,000 communities across the U.S. You can also purchase flood insurance privately. There are two types of coverage in most policies:
- Building coverage: addresses permanent fixtures like walls, electrical and plumbing systems, built-in kitchen appliances, cabinets and window blinds.
- Content coverage: applies to personal belongings, curtains, laundry equipment, small appliances, valuables (up to a fixed limit) and carpets that sit over existing floors. You may notice that what falls under each type of coverage can seem a little confusing. For example, window blinds count as building coverage, but the curtains surrounding them fall under content coverage. Refrigerators and ovens have building coverage, but not washers and dryers.
Guard Against the Wake
An “it’ll never-happen-to-me” attitude can be unrealistic as rain and hurricane seasons continue to break records year after year. Flood insurance can save you from heartache if you see meteorologists in windbreakers staking out your neighborhood. Call your We Insure office today for a fast, free quote.
Sources
https://www.floodsmart.gov/flood-insurance-cost/calculator
https://www.fema.gov/flood-insurance
https://www.floodsmart.gov/coverage
https://www.floodsmart.gov/flood-insurance/why?web=1&wdLOR=cB6A535FA-3EA5-4203-ACF3-D62EEB9B39EC