Commercial
Property Coverage Outline
Property Insurance
is any type of insurance that indemnifies an insured party who suffers
a financial loss because property has been damaged or destroyed.
Property is considered to be any item that has a value. Property
can be classified as real property or personal property. Real property
is land and the attachments to the land, such as buildings. Personal
Property is all property that is not real property. The Building
and Personal Property coverage form is the form used to insure almost
all types of commercial property. The insuring agreement in the
Building and Personal Property coverage form promises to pay for
direct physical loss or damage to covered property at the premises
described in the policy when caused by or resulting from a covered
cause of loss. The following is a brief outline of coverages and
how they are used within the Commercial Building And Personal Property
coverage form.
Buildings and Business Personal Property
Coverage for the building includes the building and structures,
completed additions to covered buildings, outdoor fixtures, permanently
installed fixtures, machinery and equipment. The building material
used to maintain and service the insured's premises is also insured.
Business Personal Property owned by the insured and used in the
insured's business is covered for direct loss or damage. The coverage
includes furniture and fixtures, stock, and several other similar
business property items when not specifically excluded from coverage.
The policy is also designed to protect the insured against loss
or damage to the personal property of others while in the insured's
care, custody or control.
Coverage Extensions and Additional Coverages
In addition to the limits stated in the Building and Personal Property
coverage form, the policy has a coverage extensions section and
an additional coverages section. The coverage extensions section
provides limited coverage for newly acquired or constructed property,
property of others, certain outdoor property, and the cost to research
and reconstruct information on destroyed records. When coverage
is placed on the all risk form, two additional extensions are added
for property in transit and coverage for certain repair costs related
to damage caused by water. The two additional extensions are covered
by certain perils only. The additional coverage section provides
coverage for indirect losses that result from a direct loss. The
coverage applies to removal of debris, preservation of property,
fire department service charges and pollutant cleanup and removal.
The coverage extensions and the additional coverages have limitations
and are subject to certain conditions.
Limit of Insurance
The most the insurer will pay for loss or damage in any one occurrence
is the limit of insurance stated in the policy declarations.
Deductible
The standard deductible is $250. However, other deductible amounts
are available and the deductible applies only once per loss.
Causes of Loss
The term peril is used when discussing losses. A peril is a cause
of loss. Basic property insurance policies are written to cover
the perils of fire, lightning, explosion, windstorm, hail, smoke,
aircraft or vehicle damage, riot or civil commotion, vandalism,
sprinkler leakage, sinkhole collapse, and volcanic action. Other
property insurance policies, often referred to as the broad form
policy, add coverages for water damage, weight of snow, ice or sleet,
breakage of glass and coverage for falling objects. The broadest
coverage is the special form, which is best known as the all risk
form. All risk covers all causes of loss, except those specifically
excluded from coverage. It is possible for a commercial property
policy to have more than one cause of loss form.
Replacement Cost and Actual Cash Value
Property can be valued in several different ways. Insurance companies
commonly use two approaches to determine value, which also determines
how a loss will be paid; the replacement cost method and the actual
cash value method. Insurers consider replacement cost of a property
item to be the cost to replace it with new property of like kind.
Actual cash value is replacement cost, minus the accumulated depreciation
for age and condition.
Agreed Value
When the agreed value option is used the coinsurance requirement
is removed and the insurer agrees to cover loses for it's agreed
value. As an example, the insured has property insured for $100,000
and the agreed value is also $100,000, if a loss occurs, any loss
up to $100,000 is covered at 100% When this option is used the insured
and the insurance company agree on the value of the property before
the policy is issued. This option is usually assigned to one-of-a-kind
property.
Coinsurance
Most building and business personal property polices have a coinsurance
clause which requires the insured to carry insurance equal to at
least a specified percentage of the actual cash value of the property.
If a loss occurs, and it is determined that the amount of insurance
carried is less than the amount required, a penalty could be placed
on the insured.
Inflation Guard
An insured can insure a building for its full value at the beginning
of the policy year, but, at the end of the year, it might not be
covered for it's full value. This problem can be corrected by adding
inflation guard coverage. With inflation guard, the policy limit
increases gradually during the policy term so that the total increase
amounts to the desired percentage increase at the end of the policy
term.
Earthquake Coverage
This endorsement extends your cause of loss to include damage that
results directly from an earthquake. Coverage is provided for replacement
of buildings only. All earthquake shocks that occur within a 168
hour period (one week) are considered to be a single occurrence.
A separate deductible applies and is determined by the value of
the insured property.
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