For example, imagine storms blow through your area all the time. Over the last few months, maybe you have found wet spots in your ceiling after intense storms. You don’t repair it or report it to your insurance company, and eventually, you start getting streams of water running into your house. You finally report it, but the insurance company decides that you were negligent because you didn’t report and repair the leak the first time, and you allowed it to cause further damage to your home. Your insurance agent tells you that your policy doesn’t cover the damage, and you have to pay for the repairs out of pocket.
How Insurance Negligence Works
Insurance negligence is based on what a reasonable person would do. If you decide not to report issues or damages for some reason, it could be considered negligence on your part. Your insurance company has several choices after determining negligence, so it is up to them how to proceed. It might cover initial damages, but the damage caused because you didn’t act may not be—unless circumstances were beyond your control. Maybe you weren’t at home when the pipe burst, or perhaps there was electrical wiring in the location where the water was coming in, so you couldn’t safely approach it to take action. The insurance company wouldn’t consider it negligent if you decided to wait for qualified help. Your insurance contract requires you to take reasonable measures. Sometimes things happen by accident. For example, your child may take your drone without your knowledge and crash it into someone else’s property or injure someone. You may be considered negligent by not taking action to prevent your child from commandeering the drone, but you may have coverage for drone accidents on your policy.
What It Means for Policyholders
Depending on the level of negligence and the type of damage, your insurance policy might still pay a claim if it occurs because of your negligence. In liability cases, the insurance company will typically pay for your legal defense, but it might not pay for subsequent damages if you lose. Negligence is a case-by-case assessment, so you should always do whatever seems reasonable to protect your property and that of others.
Your Insurance Premium Might Go Up
If you fail to report damages promptly to your insurance company and more damage is caused, the insurance company will likely increase your rates if they decide to continue your coverage.
Your Policy Might Be Cancelled
The insurance company has an obligation to pay specific claims. Still, if they feel uncomfortable with your actions or feel that you have been negligent, they may take the opportunity to review your insurability with them after the fact—they may even cancel your policy. Then, you might be forced to go with high-risk insurance because other insurance companies will be aware of the cancellation. It invariably means higher premiums, so it’s better to be cautious than risk significant or repeated claims that you might have been able to avoid.