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What is the principle of 'indemnity' in property insurance?
- The insured can profit from a loss
- The insured should be restored to their financial condition before the loss — no more, no less ✓
- The insurer always pays full replacement cost
- Property insurance pays a fixed amount regardless of loss
Indemnity is a foundational principle of property and casualty insurance: the insured should be restored to their financial condition immediately before the loss, but not profit from the loss. The principle prevents moral hazard (incentive to cause or exaggerate losses for gain). Several mechanisms …
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What is 'insurable interest' in property insurance, and when must it exist?
- Not required for property insurance
- A financial stake in the property such that the insured would suffer loss if it were damaged or destroyed; must exist at the time of loss ✓
- Required only at application
- Only the lender needs insurable interest
Insurable interest in property insurance is a financial stake in the property — ownership, lease interest, security interest (like a mortgage), or other legitimate claim that creates risk of loss. Unlike life insurance (where insurable interest is required only at the time of application), property …
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What does a standard HO-3 (Special Form) homeowners policy cover?
- Named perils only
- Open perils (all risks) on the dwelling and other structures; named perils on personal property; loss of use; personal liability; medical payments to others ✓
- Only liability
- Only contents
The HO-3 (Special Form) is the most common homeowners policy. Coverage structure: Coverage A (Dwelling) and B (Other Structures) are written on open-perils basis — covers all risks except those specifically excluded; Coverage C (Personal Property) is named-perils — covers only specifically listed ri…
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What does Coverage D (Loss of Use) provide in a homeowners policy?
- Coverage for the value of unused space
- Additional living expenses (ALE) if the home is uninhabitable due to a covered loss, plus fair rental value if the insured rents part of the home ✓
- Coverage for unused appliances
- A reduction in premium
Coverage D — Loss of Use — pays additional expenses the insured incurs when their home is uninhabitable due to a covered loss. Two components: (1) Additional Living Expense (ALE) — costs above the insured's normal living expenses, such as hotel, restaurant meals (above grocery budget), laundry, pet …
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What is 'replacement cost' versus 'actual cash value' (ACV) in property loss settlement?
- They are the same
- Replacement cost is the cost to replace with new property of like kind and quality; ACV is replacement cost minus depreciation for age and condition ✓
- ACV is always higher than replacement cost
- Replacement cost is only for cars
These are the two main methods of loss valuation. Replacement Cost: what it would cost today to replace the damaged or destroyed property with new property of like kind and quality, regardless of the age or condition of the original. Actual Cash Value (ACV): replacement cost minus depreciation for a…
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What is the 'co-insurance' provision in property insurance?
- Insurance shared between two people
- A requirement that the insured carry coverage equal to a specified percentage (typically 80%) of the property's value; if underinsured, the insurer pays only a proportional share of the loss ✓
- Co-payment for each claim
- Joint insurance with the lender
Co-insurance in property insurance requires the insured to carry coverage equal to a specified percentage (typically 80%) of the property's full replacement cost value. If the insured fails to meet this requirement at the time of loss, a co-insurance penalty applies: the insurer pays only the propor…
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Which of the following is typically EXCLUDED from a standard homeowners policy?
- Fire damage
- Flood damage and earthquake damage ✓
- Theft of personal property
- Wind damage
Flood and earthquake are the two most significant standard exclusions in homeowners policies. Flood is typically defined as inundation from natural surface water (overflowing rivers, storm surge, accumulated rainwater) — though water damage from a burst pipe inside the home is covered. Flood coverag…
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How is flood insurance typically obtained?
- Through standard homeowners insurance
- Through the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP, administered by FEMA) or private flood insurers — separately from the homeowners policy ✓
- Only through state insurance funds
- Not available in the US
Flood insurance in the US is obtained primarily through the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP), administered by FEMA. NFIP policies are sold through participating private insurers but underwritten by the federal government. NFIP offers up to $250,000 building coverage and $100,000 contents for …
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What is a 'Business Owners Policy' (BOP)?
- Personal insurance for business owners
- A bundled commercial insurance package designed for small to medium businesses, combining property and general liability coverage with optional add-ons ✓
- Coverage only for the business owner's home
- A high-deductible plan
A Business Owners Policy (BOP) is a packaged commercial insurance product designed primarily for small to medium-sized businesses. It bundles two core coverages: (1) Commercial Property — insuring the building (if owned) and business personal property (inventory, equipment, fixtures); (2) Commercial…
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What is 'subrogation' in property insurance?
- Substituting one beneficiary for another
- The insurer's right to pursue the responsible third party after paying the insured's claim, recovering the amount paid ✓
- A type of policy renewal
- A premium discount
Subrogation is the insurer's right to step into the insured's shoes after paying a claim and pursue any third party legally responsible for the loss. For example, if a neighbor's tree falls on the insured's house due to the neighbor's negligence, the insurer pays the insured's claim and then has the…
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What are the typical duties of an insured after a property loss?
- Just file a claim
- Notify the insurer promptly, take reasonable steps to protect the property from further damage, prepare an inventory of damaged property, allow the insurer to inspect, and provide proof of loss ✓
- Negotiate with contractors first
- Wait for the insurer to act
Most property policies impose duties on the insured after a loss: (1) Give prompt notice to the insurer; (2) Protect the property from further damage (cover holes in roofs, tarp damaged areas, prevent water intrusion, etc.) — failure to do this can reduce or void coverage; (3) Cooperate with the inv…
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What is the difference between 'named perils' and 'open perils' coverage?
- There is no difference
- Named perils covers only specifically listed causes of loss; open perils covers all causes except those specifically excluded — open perils generally provides broader coverage ✓
- Named perils is broader coverage
- Open perils means no coverage
These are the two main coverage approaches. Named perils policies list the specific causes of loss covered — anything not listed is not covered. Common named perils: fire, lightning, windstorm, hail, explosion, riot, vehicles, smoke, vandalism, theft, falling objects, weight of ice and snow, acciden…
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What does Coverage C (Personal Property) typically include?
- Only items kept in the home
- Personal belongings owned by the insured anywhere in the world, with sub-limits on certain categories (jewelry, firearms, cash, business property) ✓
- Real estate only
- Only items mentioned in an inventory
Coverage C covers personal belongings owned by the insured anywhere in the world. The standard limit is typically 50-70% of the dwelling coverage (Coverage A). Sub-limits apply to specific categories of property considered higher risk for theft or loss: jewelry and watches (often $1,500 limit for th…
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What is a 'scheduled personal property' endorsement?
- A property inventory for the insurer
- An endorsement adding specific items (typically jewelry, art, collectibles) at appraised values, with broader coverage and no deductibles for those items ✓
- A property tax schedule
- A loss settlement schedule
Scheduled personal property (sometimes called a 'rider' or 'floater') is an endorsement that lists specific high-value items individually, with documented appraised values, and provides broader coverage than the basic Coverage C. Typical items scheduled: jewelry and watches above sub-limits, fine ar…
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What does the 'standard mortgage clause' in a homeowners policy provide?
- A discount for mortgage holders
- Protections for the mortgage lender: the lender is named as additional insured, receives notice of cancellation, and has independent rights to recover even if the homeowner's actions would void coverage ✓
- A guarantee against foreclosure
- Coverage only for mortgaged homes
The standard mortgage clause (also called the standard mortgagee clause) protects the lender's interest in mortgaged property. Key provisions: (1) The mortgage lender is named as an additional insured with insurable interest; (2) The lender receives separate notice of cancellation or non-renewal (ty…
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What does 'business income' or 'business interruption' coverage provide?
- Coverage for office equipment
- Coverage for lost net income and continuing operating expenses when a business is unable to operate due to a covered property loss ✓
- Coverage for employee salaries only
- Coverage for inventory loss
Business income (sometimes called business interruption) coverage replaces lost net income and continuing operating expenses while a business is unable to operate due to a covered property loss. Example: a restaurant fire damages the kitchen; the restaurant cannot operate for three months while repa…
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Is water damage from a broken pipe covered under a standard homeowners policy?
- Never — all water damage is excluded
- Generally yes — sudden and accidental discharge from plumbing is covered; however, continuous or repeated seepage over time is excluded, and ground water (flood) is also excluded ✓
- Only with a separate flood policy
- Only if reported within 24 hours
Standard homeowners policies cover water damage from sudden and accidental discharge of water from plumbing, heating, air conditioning, or appliances — for example, a burst pipe, a washing machine hose that fails, or a water heater that bursts. These are named perils. What is generally NOT covered: …
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What is a 'public adjuster'?
- A government official
- An adjuster licensed by the state who represents the insured (policyholder) in claim negotiations, typically working on contingency ✓
- An employee of the insurance company
- Someone who works for free
Adjusters in property insurance come in three categories: (1) Staff adjusters employed by the insurer; (2) Independent adjusters hired by the insurer on contract; (3) Public adjusters licensed by the state to represent policyholders, working for the insured against the insurer. Public adjusters typi…
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What is the difference between 'open perils' coverage on a dwelling and 'named perils' on contents in an HO-3?
- No real difference
- Dwelling is covered for any cause of loss not specifically excluded; contents are covered only for specifically listed causes — so a contents loss from an unusual cause not in the named perils list would not be covered ✓
- Contents have broader coverage
- Only contents are covered
The HO-3 (Special Form) has a coverage asymmetry that surprises some policyholders. Coverage A (Dwelling) and B (Other Structures) are open perils — covered for any cause of loss unless specifically excluded. Coverage C (Personal Property) is named perils — covered only for specifically listed cause…
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Is mold damage covered under a standard homeowners policy?
- Always covered
- Limited — mold is typically excluded except when it results directly from a covered water loss (like a burst pipe), with a low coverage cap; broader mold coverage requires endorsement ✓
- Never covered under any circumstance
- Only in some states
Mold coverage under homeowners policies has narrowed significantly since major mold litigation in the early 2000s. Standard policies typically exclude mold but provide limited coverage when mold results from a covered water loss — for example, a burst pipe that soaks the wall, leading to mold growth…
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What is an 'insurance binder'?
- A binder for paperwork
- A temporary contract of insurance providing coverage before the formal policy is issued — typically issued at the time of application for situations where coverage must start immediately ✓
- A type of policy renewal
- A discount for binding multiple policies
An insurance binder is a temporary contract of insurance that provides coverage immediately, before the formal policy is issued and delivered. Binders are common in property and casualty insurance when coverage must take effect right away — for example, at closing on a home purchase, the lender requ…
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What is a 'cause of loss' form in commercial property insurance?
- A type of inspection report
- A form attached to the commercial property policy specifying which causes of loss are covered: Basic Form (limited named perils), Broad Form (more named perils), or Special Form (open perils with exclusions) ✓
- A claim form
- An adjuster's report
Commercial property insurance uses 'Cause of Loss' forms attached to the basic property policy to specify what causes of loss are covered. Three standard ISO forms: (1) Basic Form (CP 10 10) — limited named perils including fire, lightning, explosion, windstorm, hail, smoke, aircraft/vehicles, riot,…
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What is 'guaranteed replacement cost' or 'extended replacement cost' coverage?
- Same as basic replacement cost
- Coverage that pays to fully rebuild the home even if the cost exceeds the policy's Coverage A limit, up to a specified percentage (e.g., 125%) or without limit in some policies ✓
- Coverage with no limits at all
- A type of discount
Guaranteed Replacement Cost (GRC) — increasingly rare — pays whatever it costs to rebuild the home even if the cost exceeds the Coverage A limit, with no ceiling. Extended Replacement Cost (ERC) — more common today — pays beyond the Coverage A limit up to a specified percentage (typically 125% or 15…
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What is the 'proof of loss' in a property claim?
- A police report only
- A sworn statement from the insured listing damaged property, values, and circumstances of loss — typically required within 60 days of the loss ✓
- Photos of damage
- An estimate from a contractor
The Proof of Loss is a sworn (notarized) statement from the insured detailing the loss: date and circumstances, list of damaged or destroyed property with values, the insured's interest in the property, other insurance covering the loss, and the amount being claimed. Most property policies require s…
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What is a 'binding authority' for an insurance producer?
- The legal right to bind a client to a contract
- Authority granted by the insurer to the producer to commit the insurer to coverage on its behalf, within specified limits — often verbally or in writing for short-term coverage ✓
- Authority to bind books
- Court authority
Binding authority is delegated authority from the insurer to the producer to commit the insurer to coverage on its behalf, without needing approval for each transaction. Property and casualty producers commonly have binding authority for standard residential and small commercial risks — they can iss…
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Which HO form is most commonly sold to homeowners?
- HO-1 (Basic Form)
- HO-3 (Special Form) — open perils on the dwelling, named perils on contents ✓
- HO-4 (Renters Form)
- HO-8 (Modified Coverage Form)
HO-3 is the most widely sold homeowners policy because it provides the broadest coverage at a moderate premium. DWELLING (Coverage A): open perils — all causes of loss except those specifically excluded. PERSONAL PROPERTY (Coverage C): named perils — only the listed causes (fire, theft, wind, etc.).…
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What is 'replacement cost' coverage?
- Current market value of the property
- The cost to replace the damaged property with new property of like kind and quality — without deducting for depreciation ✓
- The insured's purchase price
- The assessed value for tax purposes
Replacement Cost Value (RCV) pays the cost to replace damaged property with new property of similar kind and quality — WITHOUT deducting for depreciation. This is more favorable than Actual Cash Value (ACV), which deducts depreciation. Example: a 10-year-old roof destroyed by hail. ACV would pay $8,…
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Which of the following losses is typically EXCLUDED from a standard homeowners policy?
- Fire
- Theft
- Flood (rising water from external sources) ✓
- Vandalism
Flood is the most commonly tested homeowners exclusion. Standard homeowners policies (HO-3 and similar) EXCLUDE: flood (rising water from any external source — rivers, storm surge, surface water); earthquake (earth movement); sewer/drain backup (unless endorsement purchased); wear and tear; intentio…
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What is 'business interruption' (BI) insurance?
- Coverage for computer hacking incidents
- Coverage that replaces lost income and continuing expenses when a covered property loss prevents normal business operations ✓
- Liability coverage for injuries on business premises
- Coverage for employee dishonesty
Business Interruption (BI) — also called Business Income coverage — pays for: LOST REVENUE (the income the business would have earned if not for the covered loss); CONTINUING EXPENSES (rent, utilities, payroll for key employees that continue even when operations are halted). BI requires a covered di…
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An insured's home burns down. The house had $200,000 coverage but was insured to 80% of its $300,000 replacement cost. What is the coinsurance penalty on a $50,000 partial loss?
- $50,000 (full payment)
- $41,667 (coinsurance formula result) ✓
- $40,000
- $0 — coinsurance doesn't apply to partial losses
COINSURANCE FORMULA: (Insurance carried / Insurance required) × Loss. Required: 80% × $300,000 = $240,000. Carried: $200,000. Ratio: $200,000 / $240,000 = 5/6 = 0.833. Payment: 5/6 × $50,000 = $41,667. Because the insured is underinsured (has $200K instead of required $240K), they receive only 83.3%…
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What does Coverage B (Other Structures) in a homeowners policy cover?
- The main dwelling only
- Detached structures on the insured's property — garages, sheds, fences, gazebos — typically limited to 10% of Coverage A (dwelling) limit ✓
- The insured's business structures
- Coverage B does not exist in homeowners policies
Coverage B (Other Structures) covers structures on the insured's property that are separate from the main dwelling — detached garages, tool sheds, fences, driveways, in-ground pools, and similar. The standard limit is 10% of the Coverage A dwelling limit (e.g., $300,000 Coverage A = $30,000 Coverage…
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What is the 'coinsurance clause' in a commercial property policy?
- A requirement to share claims with other insurers
- A requirement that the insured carry insurance equal to a specified percentage (typically 80%, 90%, or 100%) of the property's replacement cost value — underinsurance results in a penalty at claim time ✓
- A government mandate to offer coverage
- A provision allowing co-ownership of the policy
Commercial property coinsurance requires the insured to carry insurance equal to a specified percentage of the property's replacement cost value (RCV). Typical coinsurance requirements: 80%, 90%, or 100% of RCV. At a partial loss, if the insured carried less than required, their recovery is proporti…
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What is a 'scheduled personal property' endorsement?
- A list of excluded items
- An endorsement that provides additional coverage for specific high-value personal property items (jewellery, art, firearms, furs) listed individually at agreed values — removing the sublimits that apply to these items under Coverage C ✓
- A list of covered perils
- A schedule of premium payments
Standard homeowners Coverage C (Personal Property) has sublimits for certain categories of high-value items — jewellery typically $1,500-$2,500; furs $1,500; silverware $2,500; firearms $2,500; cash $200-$500; fine art $2,500. These sublimits apply even if total Coverage C is generous. A Scheduled P…
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What is 'builders risk' coverage?
- Liability coverage for construction companies
- Property coverage for a building under construction — protecting the structure, materials, and equipment on site from covered perils while the project is being built ✓
- Auto coverage for construction vehicles
- Workers' comp for builders
Builders Risk is a specialized property coverage for structures under construction. It covers: the building being constructed; materials and supplies on site or in transit for the project; temporary structures (scaffolding, equipment sheds). Coverage is typically on a 'reporting form' where the limi…
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Under a homeowners policy, is a home-based business covered for business losses?
- Yes — homeowners policies cover all activities at the home
- No — homeowners policies typically EXCLUDE business activities and business property above small sublimits; a separate business policy, home business endorsement, or BOP is needed ✓
- Yes for losses under $5,000
- Only if the business is registered with the state
The BUSINESS PURSUITS exclusion in standard homeowners policies excludes: bodily injury or property damage arising from business activities (Coverage E liability); business property beyond sublimits (typically $2,500 at home for business property under Coverage C). This means: if a client slips and …
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Under a standard homeowners policy, which structure on the property would typically be covered under Coverage B (Other Structures)?
- The main dwelling
- A detached garage — Coverage B covers structures not attached to the main dwelling; typically limited to 10% of the dwelling coverage amount; excludes structures used for business ✓
- A tree that falls on the house
- Personal property inside the garage
HOMEOWNERS COVERAGE B — OTHER STRUCTURES: Covers: Detached garages; Fences; Sheds; Swimming pools (structure, not water or contents); Driveways; Sidewalks; In-ground sprinklers; LIMIT: Typically 10% of Coverage A (dwelling) — a $300,000 dwelling = $30,000 for other structures; EXCLUSIONS: Structures…
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A homeowner's roof is 15 years old and suffers hail damage. The adjuster values the damaged roof at $20,000 replacement cost and determines 50% depreciation based on age and condition. The homeowner has an RCV policy. How much is paid?
- $10,000 (ACV)
- $10,000 initially, with $10,000 in recoverable depreciation available after repairs are completed ✓
- $20,000 immediately
- $0 because the roof is too old
RCV HOMEOWNERS CLAIM — RECOVERABLE DEPRECIATION: Step 1: Adjuster pays ACV first: $20,000 - $10,000 depreciation = $10,000 (minus deductible); Step 2: After the roof is repaired or replaced, the insured submits receipts; Step 3: Insurer releases the recoverable depreciation: $10,000 additional (minu…
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A client asks if flooding from a nearby river is covered under their homeowners policy. What should the agent or adjuster explain?
- All homeowners policies cover flood damage
- Flood damage is EXCLUDED from standard homeowners policies — flood insurance must be purchased separately, either through the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) or private flood insurers ✓
- Flood is covered if caused by a storm
- Only basements are excluded from flood coverage
FLOOD EXCLUSION: Standard homeowners and commercial property policies EXCLUDE flood damage. DEFINITION: Flood includes: Surface water inundation from any source (rivers, lakes, oceans, ponds); Mudslides caused by accumulating water; Overflow of inland or tidal waters; NFIP (National Flood Insurance …
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What is a Business Owners Policy (BOP) and for what businesses is it designed?
- A policy for Fortune 500 companies
- A packaged commercial policy that combines property, general liability, and business income coverages for small to medium-sized businesses — designed for eligible businesses with limited exposure that don't need individually crafted commercial lines policies ✓
- A personal umbrella policy
- A policy that covers only business vehicles
BUSINESS OWNERS POLICY (BOP): DESIGNED FOR: Small to mid-size businesses with limited operations and manageable risks (generally revenue under $5-10M, premises under 25,000 sq ft depending on insurer); COVERAGE PACKAGE: Commercial property (building and business personal property); Business liabilit…
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A client has $250,000 of Coverage C (personal property) on their homeowners policy. They experience a theft of jewellery worth $15,000. Why might their recovery be less than expected?
- Theft is never covered on homeowners policies
- Personal property coverage contains sublimits for certain high-value categories — jewellery, watches, and furs typically have a sublimit of $1,500-$2,500 for theft under standard Coverage C; to fully insure high-value jewellery, a scheduled personal property endorsement or floater is needed ✓
- The $250,000 limit should cover anything
- The insured must have reported the theft within 24 hours
COVERAGE C SUBLIMITS: Standard HO policies impose SUBLIMITS for specific high-value categories within the overall Coverage C limit. Common sublimits: Jewellery, watches, furs: $1,500-$2,500 for theft; Cash and bank notes: $200; Securities and deeds: $1,500; Silverware and goldware: $2,500; Watercraf…
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A commercial tenant (not the building owner) suffers a fire loss in their leased space. Their equipment and inventory are destroyed. What coverage would address their loss?
- The building owner's policy covers everything inside
- Business Personal Property (BPP) coverage under a commercial property policy — covers furniture, fixtures, equipment, machinery, and stock/inventory owned by the insured tenant; does NOT cover the building itself (owner's responsibility) or property of others ✓
- Only a general liability policy covers this
- No coverage exists for tenants
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY FOR TENANTS: BPP (Business Personal Property): Covers the insured's own contents: furniture; fixtures; equipment; machinery; inventory/stock; DOES NOT COVER: The building (owner's responsibility unless tenant is responsible per lease); property of others in the insured's care (co…
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A homeowners policy has a liability coverage limit of $300,000. A guest is seriously injured at the insured's property and sues for $500,000. The jury awards $500,000. How is this handled?
- The insurer pays $500,000 because they are required to defend
- The insurer pays $300,000 (policy limit) — the insured is personally responsible for the $200,000 excess unless they have an umbrella policy covering the gap ✓
- The insured pays nothing — the jury award is always capped at policy limits
- The insurer splits the excess with the insured
LIABILITY POLICY LIMITS AND EXCESS JUDGMENT: The homeowners liability limit ($300,000) is the maximum the insurer pays — not a guarantee of full protection. WHAT THE INSURER DOES: Pay the policy limit ($300,000); defend the lawsuit up to and during trial (defense costs may be inside or outside the l…
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What does 'inland marine' insurance cover?
- Shipping on lakes and rivers only
- Property in transit, high-value movable property, and property of others in the insured's custody — despite the name, it rarely involves water today; it includes: contractors equipment, jewellers block, camera floaters, fine arts, accounts receivable, and computer equipment on a floater ✓
- Only boats and watercraft
- Commercial vehicle cargo only
INLAND MARINE INSURANCE (confusingly named): Originally covered goods transported on inland waterways; evolved to cover movable property and transportation risks broadly. MODERN INLAND MARINE CATEGORIES: Floaters for individual items: personal articles, cameras, jewellery, musical instruments; Contr…
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After a covered fire loss, the insured's home is uninhabitable. The mortgage is $1,500/month; temporary housing costs $2,500/month. How does Coverage D (Additional Living Expense) calculate what is paid?
- The full $2,500/month hotel cost
- The full cost of repairs
- The additional amount above normal living expenses — $2,500 (temporary housing) - $0 (no mortgage payment while displaced, or food savings) = the additional cost to maintain the insured's normal standard of living; typically $1,000-$1,500/month in this scenario ✓
- Nothing — the insured must stay in the damaged home
COVERAGE D — ADDITIONAL LIVING EXPENSE (ALE): ALE pays the ADDITIONAL cost of living beyond normal expenses, not the total cost. CALCULATION: Normal monthly expenses would include mortgage, utilities, groceries; With displacement: rent temporary housing ($2,500) instead of paying mortgage ($1,500) =…
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A commercial property policy includes a 'vacancy clause.' A building has been vacant for 62 days and is damaged by vandalism. How does the vacancy clause affect coverage?
- No effect — all covered losses are paid
- Vacancy clause provisions typically suspend certain coverages or add penalties after 60 days of vacancy — vandalism is commonly excluded after the vacancy threshold; the insurer may reduce the settlement or deny vandalism damage entirely ✓
- Vacancy only affects fire coverage
- Only applies if the building was intentionally vacated
VACANCY CLAUSE in commercial property: STANDARD PROVISION: If a building is vacant for more than 60 consecutive days (some policies 30 days), the insurer: suspends coverage for certain perils (vandalism and malicious mischief are almost always suspended); may reduce payment by 15% for covered losses…
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What does the dwelling coverage (Coverage A) in a homeowners policy protect?
- The homeowner's car
- The physical structure of the home itself (and typically attached structures) ✓
- Only the contents inside
- The neighbor's property
DWELLING COVERAGE (Coverage A) in a homeowners policy protects the PHYSICAL STRUCTURE of the home itself — the house and typically structures attached to it (attached garage, etc.). Property insurance/homeowners. HOMEOWNERS COVERAGE PARTS: Coverage A — DWELLING (the house structure); Coverage B — OT…
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What is the difference between 'actual cash value' (ACV) and 'replacement cost' coverage?
- They are identical
- ACV pays the replacement cost MINUS depreciation; replacement cost pays the full cost to replace the item with a new one (no deduction for depreciation) ✓
- ACV always pays more
- Replacement cost pays nothing
ACTUAL CASH VALUE (ACV) vs REPLACEMENT COST: ACV pays the cost to replace the item MINUS DEPRECIATION (the item's used/depreciated value) — e.g., a 10-year-old roof is paid at its depreciated worth, not the cost of a new roof; REPLACEMENT COST pays the FULL cost to replace the item with a NEW one of…
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What is a 'peril' in property insurance?
- The insurance premium
- The cause of a loss (such as fire, theft, windstorm, or hail) ✓
- The insurance company
- The deductible amount
A PERIL is the CAUSE of a loss — the event that causes damage, such as FIRE, THEFT, WINDSTORM, HAIL, lightning, vandalism, or water damage. Property insurance/policy concepts. NAMED-PERIL policies cover ONLY the perils specifically listed in the policy (if it's not named, it's not covered); OPEN-PER…
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Which of the following is typically EXCLUDED from a standard homeowners policy and requires separate coverage?
- Fire damage
- Flood damage ✓
- Theft
- Windstorm damage
FLOOD DAMAGE is typically EXCLUDED from standard homeowners policies and requires SEPARATE flood insurance (often through the National Flood Insurance Program/NFIP or private flood insurers). Property insurance/exclusions. EARTHQUAKE is also commonly excluded (requires separate earthquake coverage).…
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What is the purpose of a 'coinsurance clause' in a commercial property policy?
- To split costs between two insurers
- To require the insured to carry insurance equal to a specified percentage (often 80%) of the property's value, or face a penalty (reduced claim payment) at the time of a loss ✓
- To eliminate the deductible
- To increase the coverage automatically
A COINSURANCE CLAUSE in commercial property insurance requires the insured to carry insurance equal to a SPECIFIED PERCENTAGE (commonly 80%, sometimes 90% or 100%) of the property's value. If the insured is UNDERINSURED (carries less than required) at the time of a loss, a PENALTY applies — the clai…
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What is the principle of 'indemnity' in property insurance?
- The insured should profit from a loss
- The insured should be restored to approximately the same financial position they were in before the loss — no better and no worse ✓
- The insurer pays nothing
- The insured pays the full loss themselves
The principle of indemnity holds that property insurance is intended to restore the insured to approximately the same financial position they occupied just before a covered loss — making them 'whole' again — but not to allow them to profit from the loss. This is why claim payments are generally base…
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What is the difference between 'actual cash value' (ACV) and 'replacement cost' coverage?
- They pay the same amount
- ACV pays the replacement cost minus depreciation, while replacement cost coverage pays to replace the property with new property of like kind and quality without deducting depreciation (subject to policy terms) ✓
- ACV pays more than replacement cost
- Replacement cost subtracts depreciation twice
Actual cash value (ACV) is generally calculated as the replacement cost of the property minus depreciation (the loss in value due to age and wear), so an ACV settlement on an older item pays less than buying new. Replacement cost coverage pays the cost to replace the damaged property with new proper…
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What does the liability coverage (Coverage E) in a homeowners policy generally protect against?
- Damage to the insured's own home
- Claims for bodily injury or property damage to others for which the insured is legally responsible, such as a guest injured on the property ✓
- Only flood damage
- The insured's medical bills only
Coverage E (Personal Liability) in a standard homeowners policy protects the insured against claims and lawsuits for bodily injury or property damage to others for which the insured is found legally responsible — for example, a visitor who slips and is injured on the property, or damage the insured …
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In a standard homeowners policy, what is the typical structure of the main property coverages (Coverages A through D)?
- They all cover the same thing
- Coverage A — dwelling; Coverage B — other structures; Coverage C — personal property; Coverage D — loss of use (additional living expenses) ✓
- They cover only liability
- They cover only the land
A standard homeowners policy organizes property coverage into sections: Coverage A insures the dwelling (the house structure); Coverage B insures other structures on the premises not attached to the house (such as a detached garage, shed, or fence); Coverage C insures personal property (the insured'…
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What is the difference between a 'named perils' policy and an 'open perils' (all-risk) policy?
- They cover identical risks
- A named perils policy covers only the perils specifically listed in the policy, while an open perils (all-risk) policy covers all causes of loss except those specifically excluded ✓
- Named perils covers everything
- Open perils excludes everything
A named perils policy covers a loss only if it is caused by a peril that is specifically listed (named) in the policy — placing the burden on the insured to show the loss came from a covered peril. An open perils (also called all-risk or special form) policy covers loss from any cause except those s…
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Why are flood and earthquake typically excluded from standard homeowners and many property policies?
- They are too minor to matter
- Because they are catastrophic, geographically concentrated risks that are difficult to insure under standard policies, and are instead covered by separate flood or earthquake policies or endorsements ✓
- They are always covered
- They are illegal to insure
Standard homeowners and many property policies exclude flood and earthquake because these perils are catastrophic and geographically concentrated — when they occur, they cause enormous losses across many properties at once, which is difficult to insure with ordinary premiums and the law of large num…
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What is the purpose of a 'coinsurance clause' in a property insurance policy?
- To require two insurers
- To encourage the insured to carry insurance equal to a specified percentage (often 80%) of the property's value; if underinsured below that level, claim payments are reduced by a penalty ✓
- To double the premium
- To pay claims in full regardless of the amount carried
A coinsurance clause in property insurance requires the insured to carry coverage equal to a specified percentage — commonly 80% — of the property's replacement value. If the insured carries at least that percentage, partial losses are paid in full (up to the limit). If the insured is underinsured b…
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What is 'subrogation' in property and casualty insurance?
- The insured paying the insurer back
- The insurer's right, after paying a claim, to pursue recovery from a third party who was responsible for causing the loss, stepping into the insured's legal rights ✓
- A type of deductible
- A way to increase the policy limit
Subrogation is the right of an insurer, after it has paid a covered claim to its insured, to step into the insured's shoes and pursue recovery from a third party who was legally responsible for the loss. For example, if another driver damages the insured's property and the insurer pays the claim, th…
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What is a Business Owners Policy (BOP) designed to provide?
- Only auto coverage
- A package policy for small to medium businesses that typically combines commercial property coverage and general liability coverage (and often business interruption) in one policy ✓
- Only workers compensation
- Only personal homeowners coverage
A Business Owners Policy (BOP) is a package policy designed for small and medium-sized businesses that combines several common coverages into one convenient, often cost-effective policy. It typically includes commercial property coverage (for the building and business personal property), general lia…
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What does 'business interruption' (business income) insurance cover?
- Physical damage to the building only
- The loss of income and certain continuing expenses a business suffers when it must suspend or reduce operations due to a covered property loss ✓
- Employee salaries forever
- Customer injuries
Business interruption (business income) insurance covers the income a business loses, and certain continuing expenses it must still pay (such as rent or some payroll), when it has to suspend or curtail operations because of a covered physical loss to its property — for example, a fire that forces a …
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What is an 'insurable interest' requirement in property insurance, and when must it exist?
- It is never required
- The policyholder must have a financial stake in the property such that they would suffer a loss if it were damaged, and this interest must exist at the time of the loss ✓
- It must exist only when the policy is issued, not at loss
- It applies only to life insurance
In property insurance, insurable interest means the policyholder must have a genuine financial stake in the insured property — they would suffer a financial loss if it were damaged or destroyed. Unlike life insurance (where insurable interest is needed at policy inception), in property insurance the…
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What is the typical insurance treatment of losses caused by the insured's intentional acts?
- They are fully covered
- Intentional or fraudulent acts by the insured are generally excluded, because insurance covers fortuitous (accidental, unexpected) losses, not deliberately caused ones ✓
- They are covered at double value
- Only intentional acts are covered
Property and casualty insurance is designed to cover fortuitous losses — those that are accidental, sudden, and unexpected from the insured's standpoint. Losses the insured causes intentionally or fraudulently (such as arson by the owner) are generally excluded, because covering them would violate t…
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What is the purpose of the 'mortgagee clause' in a homeowners or property policy?
- To exclude the lender
- To protect the interest of the mortgage lender (mortgagee) in the insured property, giving the lender certain rights such as being named on claim payments and being notified of cancellation ✓
- To increase the deductible
- To cover the borrower's car
A mortgagee clause protects the interest of the mortgage lender in property that secures a loan. Because the lender has a financial stake (insurable interest) in the property until the mortgage is paid off, the clause typically gives the mortgagee rights such as being named as a payee on claim check…
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What is the role of an 'appraisal' clause when the insured and insurer disagree about the amount of a loss?
- It cancels the claim
- It provides a dispute-resolution process in which each party selects an appraiser, the appraisers select an umpire, and an agreement by any two of the three sets the amount of loss ✓
- It lets the insurer decide alone
- It applies only to liability claims
The appraisal clause in many property policies provides a method to resolve disputes specifically about the amount (value) of a covered loss — not about whether coverage applies. Typically, each party (insured and insurer) selects a competent, independent appraiser; the two appraisers then choose an…
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What does 'loss of use' / 'additional living expense' coverage in a homeowners policy provide?
- Payment for the land value
- Reimbursement for the extra costs of living elsewhere (such as temporary housing and meals beyond normal expenses) while the home is uninhabitable due to a covered loss ✓
- Payment for the mortgage balance
- Coverage for the insured's vehicle
Loss of use coverage (Coverage D), often called additional living expense (ALE), reimburses the insured for the increase in living costs they incur when their home becomes uninhabitable because of a covered loss — for example, the cost of a hotel or rental, restaurant meals, and other expenses above…