Archive

Posts Tagged ‘property’

Blindly renewing your policy will cost you money. Guaranteed.

April 30th, 2010

Too often I’m faced with condo associations that make a critical mistake when insuring their properties – they simply renew without looking. It’s critical because in many cases, policies are renewed year after year without regard to changing property values, changing conditions, aging equipment and facilities, or changing occupancy levels.

And in today’s uncertain real estate market, those criteria could mean you’re either underinsured and assuming more risk than you need to or you’re paying for too much coverage. Let’s look at it from an underinsured perspective. Suppose your association purchased a new policy five years ago. At that time, the property consisted of three buildings, a pool, and six acres with a paved walking trail. The property value then was $1.2 million. Read more…

Bookmark and Share

Rock, Scissors, Paper…WHO COVERS WHAT?

January 21st, 2009

09-0121rpscompOne potentially confusing issue in condominium associations is who insures what.  In the past, most condominium association policies would cover whatever the association owned.  Other association policies extended coverage into the units – for example, the sheetrock walls and ceiling, the plumbing, and the electrical within each individual unit.  Association policies would often be written broad enough to cover the floor, kitchen cabinets, appliances, and carpeting.

In recent years, with the rising cost of insurance claims and the ambiguous language in some association CC&R’s, insurance coverage has changed dramatically.  Many condominium documents specifically detail what is to be covered – - for example:  roof repair and replacement only.  In this instance, the documents are explicitly pointing out that all other structure is not covered. Read more…

Bookmark and Share

Twitter links powered by Tweet This v1.6.1, a WordPress plugin for Twitter.