Who needs umbrella insurance?
Anyone with income or assets they want to protect — a home, a boat, investments, savings, rental properties — could benefit from umbrella insurance.
You may benefit if you:
You’ve worked hard for your car, home, savings — your success. Personal umbrella coverage can help as you protect these assets from the unexpected.
Umbrella insurance provides additional liability coverage, in $1 million increments up to $10 million, over liability coverage in other policies you already have and for unusual risks that aren’t covered by your other policies. It’s an affordable way to help you keep an extraordinary event from becoming a financial life-changer. Now that you know what it is, how does it work?
An umbrella policy builds on the liability coverage of your existing car insurance, homeowners insurance, and renters, condo or boat insurance. If you cause injuries or damage to someone else and max out the liability limit in your existing policy, umbrella insurance can provide additional coverage, adding a layer of protection for your finances.
Umbrella insurance may also provide coverage where your existing liability policies don’t — for example, if you’re sued for slander over a social media post or you borrow a friend’s jet ski and are sued for injuries to a swimmer. And it follows you anywhere in the world.
These common situations are examples of the many ways umbrella insurance could help.
Their car is totaled, they need medical care — and they sue you for lost wages while they recover, plus pain and suffering.
Cost of accident, legal bills and settlement
$550,000
Auto
policy limit
$300,000
Umbrella
could pay
$250,000
A guest slips off your diving board and hits her head on stone pavers around your pool. She needs back surgery and ongoing rehab — and will be out of work for months.
Medical costs, rehab and lost wages
$430,000
Homeowners
policy limit
$300,000
Umbrella
could pay
$130,000
You leave your bathtub running and flood the condo downstairs, damaging walls, floors and furniture. Her home-based business shuts down while repairs are made.
Cost of repairs, new belongings, lost income
$350,000
Condo
policy limit
$300,000
Umbrella
could pay
$50,000
An umbrella policy typically covers costs related to:
Bodily injury to others: medical bills, rehab, lost wages
Property damage to others: Car, boat or home repairs, replacement of belongings
Legal costs if you’re sued over injuries or damage you cause
Lawsuits over defamation, libel, slander and invasion of privacy
Damage or injury that occurs outside the U.S.
A standard Farmers® umbrella policy typically includes coverage for:
Your primary residence
Two motorized vehicles
Small sailboats
Motorboats (under 50 horsepower)
You can also add optional umbrella coverage for:
Additional motorized vehicles
Rental properties
Jet skis and jet sleds
Vacant land
Second or vacation homes
Unlicensed recreational vehicles
Uninsured/underinsured motorist bodily injury (UMBI)
Coverage in an umbrella policy varies, but some of the most important and common exclusions include:
Anyone with income or assets they want to protect — a home, a boat, investments, savings, rental properties — could benefit from umbrella insurance.
You may benefit if you:
Host guests in your home
Have substantial savings or investments
Have a high income that could be garnished to pay damages
Have a new driver in the house
Travel out of the country frequently
Have a pet
Have a pool, coach a child’s team, post frequent reviews on social media or take part in other activities at higher risk of a lawsuit
Umbrella insurance can cost less than $1 a day for $1 million in coverage in many states. According to the Insurance Information Institute, “The first $1 million of coverage costs about $150 to $300 per year, the second million about $75, and subsequent increments of $1 million cost about $50 per year.” But your cost will depend on how much underlying insurance you have, where you live and the risk you represent.
Taking advantage of insurance discounts and bundling your insurance with one company are good ways to reduce your insurance costs. A Farmers agent can help you explore your options.
An umbrella insurance policy can provide extra liability coverage over the limits provided by your home or auto policy. At Farmers, we offer from $1 million to $10 million in umbrella liability coverage.
Answer By definition, umbrella coverage is supplemental or “excess” liability coverage. In order to have this coverage, you need to have auto and home (or renters) coverage to begin with.
Think of home insurance as a package of protection. Dwelling coverage is simply one part of that package. It covers the home itself —not the contents or land. Just the structure.
As you probably know, liability means your company’s legal responsibility for injury to others or damage to their property. Sources of liability include auto accidents, product defects and errors made by the company.
Think of umbrella insurance as an extra layer of liability coverage on top of your existing home and auto insurance — a personal umbrella over you and your assets.