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All Forum Posts by: Tony Wilcox

Tony Wilcox has started 5 posts and replied 140 times.

Post: Lafayette Indiana rental investment

Tony WilcoxPosted
  • Insurance Agent
  • Posts 143
  • Votes 67

Will it be student rental?

Post: Insurance - To file a claim or NOT to file a claim?

Tony WilcoxPosted
  • Insurance Agent
  • Posts 143
  • Votes 67

You can never really know how it will impact your rates. All I can say is that it will. Mainly it will impact your insurance score which is a major factor in determining the rate. You wouldn't see anything until renewal, or if you went to buy another property. Now it might not change hardly at all, or it could raise your rates by $20/month, or more. There is just no way to truly know until renewal. 

Post: Rental Property Insurance and umbrella policy

Tony WilcoxPosted
  • Insurance Agent
  • Posts 143
  • Votes 67

@Jon Reed State Farm does have a limit as a heads up, and you are very close!

Post: Short term rental insurance

Tony WilcoxPosted
  • Insurance Agent
  • Posts 143
  • Votes 67

My clients typically will add the endorsement for short term to either secondary home (if they plan on using it sometimes), or landlord rental if it is purely used for renting.

Post: What insurances do I need.

Tony WilcoxPosted
  • Insurance Agent
  • Posts 143
  • Votes 67

Robert, never heard of a carrier increasing coverage for the value of the land. Banks sometimes require coverage up to the purchase price, but has nothing to do with the carrier. I got around this with banks by sending them the replacement cost estimator 

Post: Home insurance coverage

Tony WilcoxPosted
  • Insurance Agent
  • Posts 143
  • Votes 67

If you are renovating the home I would make sure you have correct coverage for a vacant home. Then decide if you want to insure it in full, or at a depreciated amount. 

Post: Funds available, looking for suggestions

Tony WilcoxPosted
  • Insurance Agent
  • Posts 143
  • Votes 67

I would completely agree with @Anna Laud on this in regards to the Indy market

Post: What insurances do I need.

Tony WilcoxPosted
  • Insurance Agent
  • Posts 143
  • Votes 67

As mentioned above, you should landlord insurance with enough liability and an umbrella. Also I recommend having your tenants get renters insurance and listing you as the additional insured. This way if there is a claim they are liable for it can be claimed against their renters liability and will go directly to you. You also get any info on if it is cancelled.

Post: What to look out for, Spring/Summer edition

Tony WilcoxPosted
  • Insurance Agent
  • Posts 143
  • Votes 67

Hello BP! I just wanted to put a post out here with some info for investors on what to check and look out for in the coming months, in regard to insurance.

Spring and Summer can come with extremes in weather. Of course, Spring brings a lot of water and crazy swings in temperature. The biggest things to make sure you are aware of on your policy is water backup, and service/utility line coverage. Water backup coverage is not something standard on a landlord home policy. This will add coverage for the home in case of a sump pump failure, blockage, and various other problems that can cause water to backup into your basement, or home. Something many people with sump pumps do not realize is that there isn’t always a backup power source for the pump. The greatest chance for water to accumulate is during a bad storm, which can knock out the power and render the pump useless. The water backup coverage would still provide protection in this case. Make sure to get enough coverage for cleanup and replacement of damaged items.

Service Line coverage is something somewhat new to landlord insurance, and not offered by all carriers. This coverage provides protection for the service/utility lines that run from the house to wherever it connects to the city/county lines near the road. These lines are typically 10 feet under ground and cost around $10,000 to fix or replace. This is something that is typically around $40/year to add.

When it comes to summer heat and wind, I always recommend checking on your roof and siding coverage. If you want to make sure your roof is covered in full make sure it is covered under replacement cost, and not actual cash value (depreciated amount). Some companies will automatically switch your roof to actual cash value coverage after a certain age (15 to 20 years), so you always need to check. Lastly, I would think about checking on roof/siding matching coverage. This is a low-cost endorsement that can assure your entire siding or roof would be replaced in case any of it is damaged. The big thing on this is if part of your roof is damaged you will not have to pay out of pocket to replace all the non-damaged portions.

As long as you are educated on what you are being covered for you can make your decisions from there based on cost.

I hope this helps some!

Post: Will insurance cover storm damage to an old roof

Tony WilcoxPosted
  • Insurance Agent
  • Posts 143
  • Votes 67

You will need to make sure it has replacement cost and it depends what state you are in. Florida will be much harder for example.