https://www.wsj.com/finance/the-home-insurance-coin-flip-nearly-half-of-claims-result-in-zero-payout-4b49acaf
The first example given is a roof example where owner claimed $49k in damages and State Farm said there was only $2k in damages. Not surprising considering how much of a scam roof replacement has become. If I was an insurer, then I would be pretty militant about this particular issue as well.
Sharing chart from article showing Farmer's and USAA are the worst of the lot. They outline several reasons in the article why zero payouts are on the rise and spokesmen from the insurance companies try to explain how these payout rates are misleading. Maybe they are; maybe they aren't. Here is the funniest quote by an insurance executive basically using the Principal Skinner meme to shift blame:
Proportion of claims closed with zero payouts by state is what you would imagine. It's worst in Florida, Texas, and California for all the reasons you would suspect. Added note on Texas:
Personal story: my brother's house completely flooded in the middle of the night due to a burst pipe on a tub. He literally came downstairs about 0200 and stepped into about a foot of water. Watched waves travel across first floor as he stepped off stairs. Insurance adjuster said there was only $20k in damages. Reality was $140K. Took him about 14 months to resolve and repair due to legal fight with insurance company. Finally got them to cover about $100k so he was about $40k.
Quote:
The five biggest home-insurers as a group didn't pay out on more than 44% of claims resolved last year, forcing homeowners and renters to fund repairs out of their own pockets, an analysis by The Wall Street Journal found.
Several factors are driving nonpayment rates higher, according to industry analysts and executives. Prime among them: Insurers are responding to a yearslong run of postpandemic losses in their home-insurance businesses by getting tougher on claims.
One way they have done this is to raise deductibles, or the amount the customer has to pay before the insurer kicks in. Some companies applied higher deductibles to specific risks such as hurricane and hail, and changed certain deductibles from a dollar value to a percentage of the value of a home. They have also set tighter criteria for claims on expensive items like roof replacements.
Consumers hit by rising premiums are themselves selecting higher deductibles to save money, insurers and consumer advocates say. This sets consumers up for disappointment when they put in for claims.
The first example given is a roof example where owner claimed $49k in damages and State Farm said there was only $2k in damages. Not surprising considering how much of a scam roof replacement has become. If I was an insurer, then I would be pretty militant about this particular issue as well.
Sharing chart from article showing Farmer's and USAA are the worst of the lot. They outline several reasons in the article why zero payouts are on the rise and spokesmen from the insurance companies try to explain how these payout rates are misleading. Maybe they are; maybe they aren't. Here is the funniest quote by an insurance executive basically using the Principal Skinner meme to shift blame:
Quote:
Sean Harper, chief executive of tech-based insurer Kin Insurance, said its relatively high nonpayment rate58% last year"is ironically due to some of the really customer-friendly stuff that we do."
Proportion of claims closed with zero payouts by state is what you would imagine. It's worst in Florida, Texas, and California for all the reasons you would suspect. Added note on Texas:
Quote:
There is often a sting in the tail for homeowners who are denied a claim: It can trigger a rate increase or nonrenewal, because the customer is now seen as a higher risk.
A few states, such as Texas, bar insurers from penalizing customers for zero-payment claims. But others allow the companies free rein, according to state regulators.
Personal story: my brother's house completely flooded in the middle of the night due to a burst pipe on a tub. He literally came downstairs about 0200 and stepped into about a foot of water. Watched waves travel across first floor as he stepped off stairs. Insurance adjuster said there was only $20k in damages. Reality was $140K. Took him about 14 months to resolve and repair due to legal fight with insurance company. Finally got them to cover about $100k so he was about $40k.