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Why tenants need household insurance
January 25, 2011 22:01:00
Ryan Starr
Say someone breaks into your apartment and makes off with your cherished possessions: laptop, flat screen TV, that leather jacket you got for Christmas. Or maybe the dishwasher overflows, flooding your kitchen and the unit below. It’s quite a mess you’re in.
But it could get messier, and financially crippling, if you don’t have renters insurance. Yet despite the affordability of tenant insurance policies — versus the staggering costs incurred in a worst-case scenario — many renters neglect to cover themselves. That’s a pity, insurance industry experts say. After all, less than a dollar a day (for a typical policy) ensures that if disaster strikes, you can weather the storm.
An average package offers up to $100,000 in contents coverage and $1 million in personal liability coverage for less than $20 a month, or about $200 a year.
“It’s a no brainer — renters should carry insurance,” says Henry Blumenthal, vice-president and chief underwriter for TD Insurance. “For a small amount of money you’re getting increased peace of mind.” If you haven’t got it you should get some. Here’s what you need to know.
The Basics. Landlords have property insurance for the building itself, but this doesn’t extend to the contents of your place. Nor does the landlord’s coverage cover your personal liability if, for example, a visitor is injured at your place or you damage someone else’s property in the building.
This is where insurance comes in. A tenant insurance policy covers your valued possessions, whether it’s clothing, electronics, jewelry or musical instruments. “It also provides coverage of your personal property while you are away from home in many places across the world,” notes Cathy Roth, a spokesperson with State Farm Insurance.
You have the option of covering improvements you’ve made to your rental unit — new broadloom, built-in closets, state of the art sound system — things that may not be included in a standard policy.
Perhaps most important, financially speaking, renters insurance covers personal liability.
“That’s a piece people often miss,” says Tim Bzowey, vice-president of home insurance with RBC Insurance. “If you have a dishwasher flood in your apartment, and you flood the unit below you, you could be liable for the damages associated with that.”
Coverage also protects you if you injure another person and they want to sue, either at home or away. “You’re on the beach in Florida, you throw a ball and hit somebody, and knock their tooth out,” Bzowey says. “You’re liable for that.” Perils covered by tenant insurance include water damage, fire, smoke, theft, vandalism and lightning and wind damage.
If your home is rendered uninhabitable following an insured peril, tenant insurance also covers additional living expenses, such as moving costs, hotel rooms, meals and storage.
Getting covered. In order to determine how much insurance you need, go through your home and make a comprehensive inventory of your belongings. Then figure out how much it would cost to replace everything in the event of an insured peril like fire, flood or theft.
Insurers advise you update your inventory at least once a year. Next decide if you want a policy to cover you and your stuff in the event of all perils (the widest range of risks) or specified perils (more common risks: fire, water, vandalism). For particularly expensive items that could exceed the coverage limits of a policy — jewelry, cash or furs, for example — you can purchase extra coverage to protect against loss or damage. Insurance companies recommend you make a photographic or videotaped record of your possessions and keep a list of serial numbers and receipts in a secure location. “This makes it easier to prove your loss and to remember all the items you have,” Blumenthal says, “because it can be a stressful time.”
What it will cost? TD’s typical tenant insurance packages range from $30,000 to $100,000 in contents coverage; that works out to about $15 to $20 a month, or roughly $200 a year. “And if you combine that with auto insurance it’s cheaper than that in most cases,” notes Blumenthal. There’s a deductible. With most companies it can be $200, $500 or $1,000 — like with auto insurance, the higher the deductible, the lower your premium.
When it comes to personal liability, insurance companies offer between $500,000 and $2 million in coverage, but recommend getting at least $1 million. “I wouldn’t nickel and dime on liability,” Blumenthal says.
But though it makes sense for tenants to cover themselves, nobody’s forcing you to buy a policy.
“It’s not mandatory,” says Blumenthal. “But join us one weekend when we’re meeting with our clients after a fire or water damage, and my God, you’d wish it was.”