HPM Insurance Blog

What Does New Hampshire Umbrella Insurance Do?

Written by April Weismann | Jul 21, 2016 8:03:00 PM

You may feel protected from any situation if you have home and auto insurance.  However, when it comes to liability that can come into play if personally sued, it is more unpredictable.  Medical expenses add up quickly, and no pre-determined value exists in someone's pain and suffering. This means you could easily exceed the coverage limit of your home or auto policy and be left paying the difference. 

A New Hampshire Umbrella policy can help provide an extra layer of protection. 

How Does a New Hampshire Umbrella Insurance Protect My Assets?

An umbrella policy typically can serve as excess coverage over your home, auto, boat, or any other recreational vehicle on which you have purchased personal insurance.

All insurance policies have limits. With many home and auto policies having a maximum liability limit of $500,000, assuming you purchased this limit, this may not be enough coverage. If you are found legally liable for an accident, your home or auto policy will pay up to the policy limit and then walk away once those limits are exhausted. You could then be required to pay the remainder out of your pocket. If you have a New Hampshire umbrella insurance policy, you could have an additional $1 million or more in liability protection.

What are some umbrella claim examples?

Multi-car accidents

Driving in the New Hampshire winter, you glance down at your phone and do not see the car in front of you stop. As a result, you crash into them, causing a multi-car accident with multiple injuries. Because you are found at fault, you are then held legally liable for the damages to the other vehicles and for the medical expenses, loss of income, and pain and suffering of the passengers. Your auto policy pays the policy limits, but not all damages claimed by the other vehicle's occupants have been settled.  In this situation, an umbrella policy could kick in and pay up to its policy limit, providing an additional $1 million to $5 million of extra coverage depending on the limit purchased.

Backyard injuries:

If you own a swing set, swimming pool, or fire pit, your chances of being sued increase. If a child comes over to play and is injured in your backyard, you may be found liable and be required to pay medical costs and other fees. An injury such as a broken spine can cause lifelong disability, which your homeowner's insurance may not be able to cover entirely. With umbrella liability coverage, your legal fees and settlements could be covered, reducing out-of-pocket charges.

The unexpected:

It is impossible to predict every situation you may encounter.  For example, you may find it hard to believe that your beloved pet could not only bite someone but cause hundreds of thousands of dollars in injuries or that your teenager would throw a party that quickly gets out of hand with injuries and damage to others' property. However, families are forced to face these situations regularly. An umbrella policy helps protect your assets against such situations, providing up to $5 million worth of liability coverage.

Do I Need Other Insurance if I Have an Umbrella Policy?

As agents, we have been asked to reduce the liability coverage someone has on their auto or home insurance to the minimum or remove it entirely, as they believe the umbrella policy provides enough protection. The oversight in this assumption is that umbrella insurance companies require minimum liability limits to be purchased on the underlying policies. The minimum limits are frequently $250,000 per person, $500,000 per accident on a personal auto, boat, or recreational vehicle, and $500,000 in liability coverage for any residence owned. If you choose to reduce or remove the coverage below what is required in the contract, you have essentially given yourself a huge deductible.

For example, you have a $1 million personal umbrella policy. You have a car insurance policy with Bodily Injury (BI) coverage at $100,000 per person and $300,000 per accident, but the umbrella company requires BI at $250,000 per person and $500,000 per accident. So if you have a severe accident and are sued for $750,000 in BI for one person's injuries, you would be required to pay $150,0000 before the umbrella policy would pay the additional $500,000. Ouch!

Even worse, if you have an umbrella policy and a boat you decided was not worth insuring, you could be in even more financial trouble if involved in a severe accident. Again, the umbrella serves as additional protection over the underlying boat policy.  If there is no underlying boat policy, you would be responsible for whatever limit should have been in place, regardless of whether it was!

These underlying limits can vary by the insurance company and policy, so check with your umbrella carrier before making any coverage changes to any liability limits.

Why you need an umbrella policy:

A single accident could be financially devastating for families across NH, despite having insurance coverage. If the damages exceed the limits of your policy, you will be forced to pay the rest out of pocket, even if that means selling your home and draining your savings. Umbrella insurance can help prevent this, extending your coverage beyond the typical limits while remaining affordable. In addition, this insurance can protect you when your other insurance falls short.

For more information about New Hampshire Umbrella insurance, visit the HPM product page.