Renting
an Apartment: Renters Insurance
Renters insurance is a necessity. Your landlord
has insurance only on the building. You are responsible
for insuring your belongings. Get renters insurance
as soon as you move into your apartment. If you
are attending college, however, check to see if
your parents' policy will cover you.
What does it cover?
Renters insurance will insure all
of your property within your apartment.
Some policies will also cover your property when
it's outside
of your apartment. For example,
if your bike is stolen when it is parked at your
friend's apartment,
your renters insurance may reimburse
you the cost of your stolen bike. Renters insurance
also covers
fire or water damage.
Consider
a replacement-cost policy. In
the stolen bike example, a replacement-cost
policy would foot the bill for you to
buy
a new bike, similar in quality
to the one you lost. Without this,
you would receive an amount equal to
what your bike is worth minus
depreciation, which probably wouldn't
be enough to buy a new bike. A
replacement-cost policy will increase
your premium slightly, but it can be well
worth it.
There are limits on reimbursement
for expensive items. If you have
computer or stereo equipment
or costly jewelry, you may want
to insure those separately. If you
have items of great sentimental value,
they obviously can't be replaced
and you should put them in a safe deposit
box.
Your insurance should
also cover personal liability.
Most renter's insurance policies
will cover all non-auto accidents, including
accidents that happen away from
your apartment. Let's say that before
your bike was stolen, you
accidentally
hit a pedestrian with it and
he or she sued you. You are
protected against lawsuits
because you have
renters insurance. Although
coverages vary, $300,000 is standard
coverage for personal liability.
How much does it
cost?
For as much as it covers,
renters insurance is relatively
inexpensive. The National Association
of Insurance
Commissioners estimates
that the average policy costs
only $169 per year. Compare
that with auto and health
insurance and
it's a bargain.
Make claims
easier
As soon as you obtain renters
insurance, document your
belongings. Make a videotape
of everything you
own or photos of everything
you would want replaced.
If you can't do that, write
a detailed
list of your things. If
you lose your belongings in a
fire it will be nearly
impossible to remember everything
you had. A record of your things
will be invaluable
in settling claims with
the insurance company.
Keep your
tapes, photos or written list somewhere
outside of your apartment - at
a friend's residence
or with a relative. If you
have a fire, you don't
want these
records destroyed as well. |