Houston Home Insurance
It is now a percentage of your dwelling limit, and it is the third dial of the Roof Payout Triangle.
If your home insurance renewal now shows a wind and hail deductible written as a percentage instead of a flat dollar amount, you are not imagining it, and you are not alone. I watched this shift happen up close while I was at Liberty Mutual in The Woodlands, and it has only spread since. It is the third dial in the Roof Payout Triangle, and it can quietly be the largest number in your whole policy. Here is how it works and how to decide what to do about it, with the full framework on our contract guide.
For retirees, the deductible question is not abstract. It is whether the check you would have to write after a storm fits the life you planned. The premium matters, but so does the number you would owe when the roof is already damaged.
This is a tradeoff, not a verdict. A higher percentage lowers your premium and a lower one raises it. The job is to know the real dollar figure and pick the level you could actually absorb after a storm.
Why is my Houston wind and hail deductible a percentage?
To limit their storm exposure, most Texas carriers now set the wind and hail deductible as a percentage of your Coverage A dwelling limit rather than a flat dollar amount. It is commonly one or two percent and rising, with three or even five percent for older roofs, and it is calculated on your rebuild cost, not your market value.
This is dial three of the Roof Payout Triangle. The decision it leaves you is whether a higher percentage, for a lower premium, is a trade you could absorb after a storm.
The percentage is applied to your Coverage A dwelling limit, which is the cost to rebuild your home, not its market price or tax value. On a 400,000 dollar dwelling limit, a two percent wind and hail deductible is 8,000 dollars. On a 450,000 dollar limit, a three percent deductible is 13,500 dollars. That is what you pay out of pocket before storm coverage begins, which is why it is worth knowing your real number today rather than discovering it after the hail.
A second surprise follows from the first. Because the deductible rides on your dwelling limit, a higher limit also means a higher dollar deductible, so the goal is to get the rebuild number right rather than simply large. And Texas law does not allow an insurer or a contractor to waive your deductible, so treat any offer to cover it with caution.
This dial is dangerous next to the other two. If your roof is settled on an Actual Cash Value basis or capped by a roof payment schedule, and you also carry a high percentage wind and hail deductible, the deductible can be larger than the reduced roof payment. The result is a covered claim that nets little or nothing. The three dials together, not any one alone, decide what you actually receive.
That is the whole reason to read them as a set. A modest looking percentage on a large dwelling limit, stacked on an aged down roof, is how families end up paying for most of a new roof themselves.
Find your wind and hail deductible on your declarations page, turn the percentage into a dollar figure on your dwelling limit, and ask yourself whether you could write that check after a storm. If the answer is no, a lower percentage may be worth the higher premium. If you keep a healthy emergency fund, a higher percentage may be a fair trade for a lower bill. There is no single right answer, only the one that fits your finances.
Because we shop the 50+ top Texas carriers we know well, we can show you the dollar deductible at each percentage and weigh it against the premium, and about 40 percent of the time we tell a family their current deductible is the right balance and to leave it alone. The full Roof Payout Triangle, including the roof settlement dials, is on our contract guide.
To limit their storm exposure, most Texas carriers now set the wind and hail deductible as a percentage of your dwelling coverage rather than a flat dollar amount. It is commonly one or two percent and rising, with three or even five percent for older roofs. The percentage is applied to your Coverage A dwelling limit, not your home's market value.
It depends on your dwelling limit, because the percentage is taken from Coverage A. On a 400,000 dollar dwelling limit, a two percent wind and hail deductible is 8,000 dollars, and on a 450,000 dollar limit a three percent deductible is 13,500 dollars. That is the amount you pay before storm coverage begins, so it is worth knowing the real number now.
On your coverage. It is calculated from your Coverage A dwelling limit, which is the cost to rebuild, not the market price or the tax value. People are often surprised that a higher dwelling limit also means a higher dollar deductible, which is one more reason to get the dwelling number right rather than simply high.
No. Texas law does not allow an insurer or a contractor to waive your deductible, so be cautious of any roofer who offers to cover it for you. You are responsible for the deductible before coverage applies, which is exactly why the percentage matters so much on a big dwelling limit.
Often because two of the roof dials stack against you. If your roof is settled on an aged down basis and you also carry a high percentage wind and hail deductible, the deductible can be larger than the reduced payment, leaving little or nothing. Reading the deductible and the roof settlement together is the only way to see your true exposure before a storm.
Sometimes, and it is a tradeoff. A lower percentage raises your premium, and a higher one lowers it but leaves more on you after a storm. The right balance depends on what you could comfortably absorb, which is a decision worth running with a broker rather than guessing. We can show you the dollar figures at each level.
Send us your renewal and we will turn that percentage into a real dollar figure on your dwelling limit, show you the tradeoff at each level, and help you pick the deductible you could actually absorb. If your current balance is right, we will say so.
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