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5 Reasons To Have Umbrella Insurance for Those Really Rainy Days

5 Reasons To Have Umbrella Insurance for Those Really Rainy Days

Umbrella insurance is aptly named. Umbrella is liability coverage that steps in when a claim is excluded from coverage or your other liability limits have been maxed out. You might think your home and auto insurance policies are enough for the foreseeable future, but there may come a time when your assets and investments are at risk because of a claim. Let’s examine five reasons you might want to consider umbrella insurance.

Reason 1: Above-and-beyond policy limits

Your home and auto policies provide liability coverage for bodily injury and property damage you cause to others or that happen on your property. Each coverage has a limit. Once you reach that limit, you’ll have to pay the remainder out of pocket.

The most common way to exceed the policy limit is if you cause a major injury, especially one resulting in a disability. Being sued is another, as the fees of a drawn-out legal battle alone could drive someone who isn’t properly insured into bankruptcy. These are litigious times.

Umbrella insurance can add a sizable amount to your liability insurance if you’re short on your home or auto coverage.

Reason 2: Insult added to injury

Umbrella insurance also covers claims that home or auto insurance typically don't cover, such as libel and slander. Libel and slander both involve false statements that damage someone else's reputation. Slander is spoken and libel is written.

Budding entrepreneurs, authors, lecturers and anyone else who spends time in the public eye will find this coverage useful. Social media makes it easy to publish embarrassing photos and videos of otherwise respectable people. Think of a business owner caught unaware during a night of drunken revelry.

Reason 3: Arrest and release

Umbrella insurance covers wrongful arrests, including detention and imprisonment. It also extends to malicious prosecution.

The policy will cover all legal and defense costs to secure your release, protect your reputation, and get any false charges thrown out.

Reason 4: Asset protection

Major lawsuits looking for a big payout can target your current assets and future earnings. Since your liability coverage is paying your defense costs, umbrella insurance can save you from having to liquidate your assets and remain in debt for years after a legal judgment.

If you own and rent property, umbrella insurance extends liability coverage to the units you rent. That’s important if someone injures themselves and sues you. Your umbrella will also step in if your home insurance doesn’t cover dog bites or indirect liability. For example, you'd be covered if a drunken party guest caused a car accident.

Reason 5: Extended definition of "injury"

Lawsuits often include claims for pain and suffering. Umbrella insurance extends the definition of bodily injury to include the psychological cost of an incident if you are judged to be at fault. This is not covered by your home or auto policy, and it can run well into the hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Umbrella insurance will step in after the coverage from your primary insurance policies has been exhausted. It doesn't cover your property, just your liability. But it does fill many coverage gaps at a reasonable cost.

Ask us about umbrella insurance, how much it costs and how much you need.