Flood Insurance: 5 Common Mistakes That Wreck a Flood Insurance Policy
The five flood insurance mistakes we see most often — and exactly how to fix each one before it costs you a claim.
Most flood insurance mistakes are not exotic. They are the same five-or-six errors made by very smart people who simply did not read their policy. Here are the ones we see most across our Alabama, Tennessee, and Mississippi homeowners — including those outside FEMA flood zones client base — and how to fix each one.
Mistake 1: Buying the lowest limits the law (or the lender) allows
The minimum is the smallest amount of flood insurance you can legally carry. It is not the smallest amount you should carry. A flash-flood event in a low-risk zone that homeowners insurance does not cover can blow through minimums in an hour. We routinely raise limits dramatically for a few extra dollars per month.
Mistake 2: Treating the deductible as the only price lever
Raising your deductible is a fine way to lower premium, but it is rarely the biggest lever. Bundling, removing stale endorsements, and shopping the carrier mix usually saves more without putting you on the hook for a higher out-of-pocket loss.
Mistake 3: Ignoring the endorsements page
The endorsements section of your flood insurance dec page is where 30-40% of the real coverage decisions live. Increased cost of compliance and private excess flood layer can be the difference between a fair claim payment and a fight.
Mistake 4: Forgetting to update the policy after life changes
New asset, new vehicle, new addition, new business activity, new all homeowner in the household — every one of these changes the right amount of flood insurance. We do annual reviews specifically to catch the changes clients forget to mention.
Mistake 5: Letting the policy auto-renew without a re-shop
Carriers raise rates between renewals. Your same coverage at the same carrier may be 8-15% more expensive next year for no fault of your own. Re-shopping every 24 months is the single highest-value habit a flood insurance customer can build.
Miller Insurance Agency reviews every client's flood insurance at renewal across multiple carriers in Alabama, Tennessee, and Mississippi — no charge, no obligation.
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