What is liability insurance terminology and why does it matter?
Liability insurance is the wall around what you have built. The contract is built from defined terms that decide whether the wall holds when a claim hits. Underlying limits decide whether the umbrella starts where home and auto end. Defense costs decide whether legal defense reduces your coverage limit or sits outside it. Personal Injury vs Bodily Injury decides whether libel, slander, and invasion of privacy are covered. Most Established Homeowners sign their umbrella policy without understanding the language inside it. The McDade Liability Insurance Glossary defines 33 terms in plain English so you can read your declarations page line by line and know what your assets are actually protected against.
What is a personal umbrella policy and who needs one?
A personal umbrella policy is a liability policy that sits above your home and auto liability coverage to provide additional protection. Personal umbrella adds coverage limits (typically $1M to $10M), broader definitions of covered claims, and drop-down protection for claims excluded by underlying policies. Households with material assets, future earnings exposure, teen drivers, swimming pools, dogs, frequent guests, or high-profile activity typically need umbrella coverage. The right limit is sized to net worth and future earnings, not home value.
What is the difference between an umbrella policy and excess liability coverage?
Umbrella policies provide broader coverage than the underlying primary policies, including drop-down for gaps where the underlying home or auto policy does not respond. Excess liability policies follow the underlying policy form exactly and only respond when underlying limits are exhausted. Personal markets typically use umbrella because the broader coverage and drop-down protection matter for households. Commercial markets often layer multiple excess liability policies above primary coverage. The terms are sometimes used interchangeably, but the structural difference matters at claim time.
What are underlying limits requirements on a Texas personal umbrella policy?
Underlying limits requirements are the minimum liability limits required on home, auto, watercraft, and other underlying policies before an umbrella will respond. Common Texas requirements include 250/500/100 auto liability, $300,000 to $500,000 home liability, and equivalent watercraft coverage. Failing to maintain underlying limits can void umbrella coverage at claim time. Verifying underlying limits at every renewal is critical because home or auto limit reductions made silently by carriers can break umbrella eligibility.
Are defense costs inside or outside the umbrella policy limit?
Depends on the policy. Standard personal umbrella policies typically pay defense costs outside the policy limit, meaning attorney fees, court costs, and expert witnesses do not reduce available coverage for the judgment. Some policies pay defense inside the limit, which can erode the available coverage substantially in a complex case. Custom personal liability policies from Chubb, PURE, AIG Private Client, and Cincinnati typically pay defense outside the limit and include broader defense definitions.
What is the difference between Bodily Injury and Personal Injury under an umbrella policy?
Bodily Injury under umbrella policies covers physical injury, sickness, disease, or death of a third party. Personal Injury is broader and covers non-physical injuries including false arrest, malicious prosecution, wrongful eviction, libel, slander, defamation, and invasion of privacy. Personal Injury under umbrella is different from Personal Injury Protection (PIP) under auto policies. The umbrella personal injury endorsement is critical for high-profile households, business owners, board members, and anyone with significant social media or public-facing activity.
What is a self-insured retention (SIR) on a personal umbrella policy?
A self-insured retention (SIR) is the amount the insured must pay out of pocket on a claim before umbrella coverage applies, when the underlying policy does not respond to that claim. SIR typically ranges from $250 to $5,000 on personal umbrella policies. SIR is different from a deductible because it applies only when the umbrella drops down to cover a gap in underlying coverage. SIR does not apply when the underlying policy responds and the umbrella sits above the underlying limit.
Why does a Texas household with no swimming pool or dog still need umbrella coverage?
Auto accidents are the largest source of personal liability claims for Texas households. A serious multi-vehicle accident causing significant injuries can produce judgments substantially exceeding 100/300/100 auto liability limits. Without umbrella coverage, the household is personally responsible for the difference, which can reach personal assets, retirement accounts, and future earnings. Texas residents also face exposure from social media activity (defamation), home guests (slip and fall), short-term rentals, household employees, board service, and youth sports coaching. Umbrella protects all of these exposures.
What is the difference between standard and custom personal liability policies?
Standard personal umbrella policies (offered by mass-market carriers like State Farm, Allstate, Travelers) typically provide limits of $1M to $5M with standard exclusions, defense costs sometimes inside the limit, and basic personal injury coverage. Custom personal liability policies (offered by high-net-worth carriers like Chubb, PURE, AIG Private Client, Cincinnati) provide broader coverage, higher available limits ($10M to $100M+), defense costs outside the limit, broader personal injury definitions, worldwide coverage, and add-back endorsements for excluded exposures. Custom policies are appropriate for households with significant assets, public profile, or complex risk profiles.
Why should I use the McDade Liability Insurance Glossary instead of a generic liability glossary?
Generic liability glossaries define umbrella terms in general. The McDade Liability Insurance Glossary defines them for Texas Established Homeowners with the specific context of Texas Insurance Code, Texas comparative fault rules, Texas dram shop law, and Houston-specific exposure profiles. Every definition includes why the term matters at claim time, what to look for on your declarations page, and a citation to the regulatory or carrier source where applicable. The goal is to help you read your umbrella contract honestly and understand whether the wall around what you have built actually holds.