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Category: Home Insurance

Does Your Roof Affect Homeowners’ Insurance Rates?

Does Your Roof Affect Homeowners’ Insurance Rates?

Part of providing for your family is literally “putting a roof over their heads.” Your home’s roof protects your family and property from damage. The roof’s condition can affect your insurance, including premium rates and whether a carrier will insure your home. Insurers consider your roof’s age, condition, material, and local weather when deciding coverage. How Roof Age Can Affect Rates The age of a...

How Landscaping Can Impact Your Homeowners' Insurance

How Landscaping Can Impact Your Homeowners' Insurance

National Lawn and Garden Month is a perfect reminder to enhance the beauty of your property via thoughtful landscaping. While a lush green lawn and colorful flower beds significantly improve curb appeal, these aesthetic choices similarly play a major role in your overall property risk profile. Homeowners often overlook how certain plants or structures affect the replacement costs of their dwelling or the likelihood of...

Why a Basic Home Insurance Policy Isn’t Always Enough

Why a Basic Home Insurance Policy Isn’t Always Enough

While a typical homeowners insurance policy offers a reliable starting point, it’s important to remember that “standard” only goes so far. Since every home, lifestyle, and risk is different, you might discover coverage gaps exactly when you need your policy the most. The Most Common Coverage Shortfalls Many homeowners assume any water damage is covered. In reality, coverage often depends on whether the event was...

A Homeowner’s Guide to Dealing with Ice Dams

A Homeowner’s Guide to Dealing with Ice Dams

Ice dams form when snow on a roof melts, runs down to colder eaves, and refreezes into a ridge that blocks drainage. Over repeated melt-freeze cycles, water can back up under shingles and leak into ceilings, walls, insulation, and belongings. Why Ice Dams Happen Most ice dam problems start with uneven roof temperatures. Heat escaping into the attic warms the upper roof surface above 32°F...

A Guide to Winterizing Your Home

A Guide to Winterizing Your Home

Drafts, Doors, and Dollars To winterize your home, start with the biggest leaks, such as attic hatches, exterior doors, baseboards, and windows. Add adhesive weatherstripping to door jambs and sweeps to the bottom edge; use silicone caulk around window and door casings, plumbing penetrations, and where siding meets the foundation. Do a simple smoke-pencil test: on a windy day, turn on kitchen/bath fans, then move...