Apologies in advance for long winded question. Had some bad luck and trying to decide if I should file a claim, and unfortunately calling my agent and the insurance direct line (Encompass) has left me even more confused since they contradicted each other.
Noticed some staining on bedroom wall day after Thanksgiving. Long story short, we had a slow leak caused by HVAC condensation pipe, presumably due to siding nail hitting it during construction and finally rusted enough to let water out (home built in 2014). Found signs of growth, so we called water mitigation company. When they left, I noticed the OSB sheathing seemed wetter and more rotted on the far edge of where they cut drywall. Not sure if they didn't notice or didn't care, but when I cut more drywall and investigated I found a SECOND leak 5 feet away from first, this one caused by a perfect storm of circumstances allowing rainwater to enter the house via a nail securing flashing where our siding meets the brick skirt. No growth on this one, but the OSB was rotted.
The day I discovered the initial leak, I called the insurance main line. He said to fix it and save receipts for claim. So I got ball rolling with mitigation. The following Monday I called the agent (first day they were open), and she said I first have to have an appraiser, but once I get that ball rolling I would lose my "no claim discount" regardless if I ended up proceeding with a claim. So I took a gamble and decided to proceed on my own, to keep my premium intact. But the repair bills are turning out to be higher than I expected so now I'm second guessing. Here's what I'm out so far:
HVAC leak repair: $200
Siding leak repair: $350
Mold mitigation: $300
Repair (quoted): $2000
So now I'm getting on the edge of wondering if I should file a claim, but it might be too late at this point. But what's bothering me is:
1) Is it too late?
2) Does my premium get extra punishment due to it being water related?
3) Is the nature of damage even covered under normal home-owners insurance?
4) Is the $550 spent stopping the leak part of the claim or out of pocket regardless?
I'm just trying to do the "math" here to see if it's worth a gamble of calling insurance back to see if I can try the claim, or just suck it up and pay the ~$3000. I'm just really frustrated, since as usual I feel like my insurance is an adversary complicating an already frustrating situation, vs being a safety net ready to help me out. Probably not the best thing to say on this forum, but I just hate being scared to use the insurance I'm paying for. I guess really it's there for the big things and I probably just need to keep stuff like this out of the picture? I just love how I'm told things like "a claim like this won't make your premium go up" but then they say "you will lose your no claim discount", as if there is a difference for all intents and purposes?
I'm also worried the appraiser would come out, say it's not covered, but them still raise my rates since I kicked off the process in the first place.
Sorry for the whining, just had a string of bad luck this year with both my car and home, and despite having insurance, I've chickened out from making claims on any of it, save for my wife's windshield since I was assured that wouldn't make my rates go up.
Thanks in advance for any help or advice on this. I'm guessing I just need to stick to out of pocket but wanted to ask just in case.
Noticed some staining on bedroom wall day after Thanksgiving. Long story short, we had a slow leak caused by HVAC condensation pipe, presumably due to siding nail hitting it during construction and finally rusted enough to let water out (home built in 2014). Found signs of growth, so we called water mitigation company. When they left, I noticed the OSB sheathing seemed wetter and more rotted on the far edge of where they cut drywall. Not sure if they didn't notice or didn't care, but when I cut more drywall and investigated I found a SECOND leak 5 feet away from first, this one caused by a perfect storm of circumstances allowing rainwater to enter the house via a nail securing flashing where our siding meets the brick skirt. No growth on this one, but the OSB was rotted.
The day I discovered the initial leak, I called the insurance main line. He said to fix it and save receipts for claim. So I got ball rolling with mitigation. The following Monday I called the agent (first day they were open), and she said I first have to have an appraiser, but once I get that ball rolling I would lose my "no claim discount" regardless if I ended up proceeding with a claim. So I took a gamble and decided to proceed on my own, to keep my premium intact. But the repair bills are turning out to be higher than I expected so now I'm second guessing. Here's what I'm out so far:
HVAC leak repair: $200
Siding leak repair: $350
Mold mitigation: $300
Repair (quoted): $2000
So now I'm getting on the edge of wondering if I should file a claim, but it might be too late at this point. But what's bothering me is:
1) Is it too late?
2) Does my premium get extra punishment due to it being water related?
3) Is the nature of damage even covered under normal home-owners insurance?
4) Is the $550 spent stopping the leak part of the claim or out of pocket regardless?
I'm just trying to do the "math" here to see if it's worth a gamble of calling insurance back to see if I can try the claim, or just suck it up and pay the ~$3000. I'm just really frustrated, since as usual I feel like my insurance is an adversary complicating an already frustrating situation, vs being a safety net ready to help me out. Probably not the best thing to say on this forum, but I just hate being scared to use the insurance I'm paying for. I guess really it's there for the big things and I probably just need to keep stuff like this out of the picture? I just love how I'm told things like "a claim like this won't make your premium go up" but then they say "you will lose your no claim discount", as if there is a difference for all intents and purposes?
I'm also worried the appraiser would come out, say it's not covered, but them still raise my rates since I kicked off the process in the first place.
Sorry for the whining, just had a string of bad luck this year with both my car and home, and despite having insurance, I've chickened out from making claims on any of it, save for my wife's windshield since I was assured that wouldn't make my rates go up.
Thanks in advance for any help or advice on this. I'm guessing I just need to stick to out of pocket but wanted to ask just in case.