No Homeowners Insurance? No Problem

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  • Опубликовано: 28 дек 2022
  • With how expensive homeowners insurance has become, especially in the state of Florida, record numbers of homeowners are opting to forego homeowners insurance all together. But is this a smart idea? And what might the outcome of this be?
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Комментарии • 374

  • @MichaelBordenaro
    @MichaelBordenaro  Год назад +11

    20 Million People Can’t Afford to Pay the Electric Bill ruclips.net/video/MP6P8jDGK4M/видео.html

    • @andreaberryman5354
      @andreaberryman5354 Год назад

      My gas shot up from $60 to $100. Electric stayed the same at just under $100 in winter. Our city bill (trash, water, sewer) shot up $33, so it's over $100 in winter with minimum water usage. Summer is now $150. Overall increase in expenses for everyone just went up about $500. Last night I spent $290 on groceries, versus what was $235 in 2020. Not a great feeling.

  • @tatianastarcic
    @tatianastarcic 7 дней назад +416

    In my opinion, a housing market crash is imminent due to the high number of individuals who purchased homes above the asking price despite the low interest rates. These buyers find themselves in precarious situations as housing prices decline, leaving them without any equity. If they become unable to afford their homes, foreclosure becomes a likely outcome. Even attempting to sell would not yield any profits. This scenario is expected to impact a significant number of people, particularly in light of the anticipated surge in layoffs and the rapid increase in the cost of living.

    • @Michaelparker12
      @Michaelparker12 7 дней назад +4

      Government policy has thrown the future under the bus for decades. The day of judgment is near. I predict an 80% drop in the stock market. Investors will abandon stocks in favor of real estate. There will be no money in banks... You must devise a strategy for survival.

    • @nicolasbenson009
      @nicolasbenson009 7 дней назад +3

      It's often true that people underestimate the importance of financial advisors until they feel the negative effects of emotional decision-making. I remember a few summers ago, after a tough divorce, when I needed a boost for my struggling business. I researched and found a licensed advisor who diligently helped grow my reserves despite inflation. Consequently, my reserves increased from $275k to around $750k.

    • @BridgetMiller-
      @BridgetMiller- 7 дней назад +2

      Mind if I ask you recommend this particular professional you use their service? i have quite a lot of marketing problems.

    • @nicolasbenson009
      @nicolasbenson009 7 дней назад +3

      Well, there are a few out there who know what they are doing. I tried a few in the past years, but I’ve been with Melissa Terri Swayne for the last five years or so, and her returns have been pretty much amazing.

    • @berniceburgos-
      @berniceburgos- 7 дней назад +2

      I just looked up Melissa online and researched her accreditation. She seem very proficient, I wrote her detailing my Fin-market goals.

  • @Floridawoodsbanshee
    @Floridawoodsbanshee Год назад +85

    How many people feel like the United States of America is one big milking station???

    • @Zp00kie
      @Zp00kie Год назад

      100% the system is designed that you keep working till you're dead. You will never be able to own anything out right, ever. And the cost of living will always go up so you have no choice.

    • @JanelleGodwin-zl8li
      @JanelleGodwin-zl8li 11 месяцев назад

      It always has been 🤣 The whole line about land of the free is a straight lie🤥🤣 America immediately went from enslaving people based on color to immediately enslaving people based on money😭 There are lawyers and workers who get paid a lot of $ in order to figure out how to keep Americans in debt; that is how convenience fees were created 😭

    • @yellowbird5411
      @yellowbird5411 3 месяца назад

      "Moo-o-o-o"

    • @djaspurh
      @djaspurh 2 месяца назад

      I just got screwed by Erie Insurance for loss of a parked utility trailer. I should have stayed with USAA.

  • @victoranski1
    @victoranski1 Год назад +24

    Hey Michael first time commenting
    I lived in Brazil for 30 years
    Nobody has home insurance down there
    My house was flooded 2feet 3 times, we lived on the riverside
    The only problem was removing the dirt lol. After the flood the house is like new
    Why?
    Every house is made of brick and concrete

  • @user-xp6sc6su9c
    @user-xp6sc6su9c 10 месяцев назад +443

    Understanding personal finances and investing will most likely lead to greater financial independence. By being knowledgeable about money and investing, individuals can make informed decisions about how to save, spend, and invest their money. A trader made over $350k in this recession influenced market.

    • @graywilliams_77.
      @graywilliams_77. 10 месяцев назад

      Stocks are pretty unstable at the moment, but if you do the right math, you should be just fine. Bloomberg and other finance media have been recording cases of folks gaining over 250k just in a matter of weeks/couple months, so I think there are alot of wealth transfer in this downtime if you know where to look.

    • @markwalker3499
      @markwalker3499 9 месяцев назад

      When you are a disabled vet on a fixed income understanding finances is really easy, you can afford to live under an overpass! See? Very simple.

  • @TheNoise0808
    @TheNoise0808 Год назад +19

    This is true history here in Florida 😓. When I buy my home I only pay $600 in 2017 and now is $3,500 in 2023 that is insane right now.

    • @jjbww0811
      @jjbww0811 Год назад +4

      And I bet you never once filed a claim to boot as well.

    • @troyb.4101
      @troyb.4101 10 месяцев назад +1

      About the same in Arizona. I am getting ready to pay off the mortgage, then fire my home insurance company.

  • @sonyamoste
    @sonyamoste Год назад +45

    I pay $5000 per yr today (Ft. Laud) and it's estimated to go up to $6500 per yr in 2023 when it renews. When I pay off my mid-century ranch home, hopefully in 5 yrs, I'll self insure. I'll bank the money instead in a stock brokerage account. If there's a disaster, I'll just pay it out of my savings up to $50k which is the money I would have saved over 10 yrs of not paying an insurance co. If the damage is more than $50k, I'll tear it down and build a modern McMansion on it and sell it and take my profits and buy a small home somewhere less expensive. If nothing too bad ever happens, then I will have saved $500+ per month in insurance premium payments over the next 40 years of my life expectancy (40 x 12 x $500 = $240,000).

    • @MichaelBordenaro
      @MichaelBordenaro  Год назад +1

      That is an interesting take on things Sonya. Thanks for sharing that.

    • @kookietherapy9398
      @kookietherapy9398 Год назад

      That's what I would do.

    • @DylanVBWRX
      @DylanVBWRX Год назад +3

      Sonya once paid off rather than self insurance why not go with a broker choose the amount of coverage you want ps you don't have to insure the value of the home and choose a higher deductible for a cheap annual premium and still have peace of mind a proper liability coverage.

    • @SandySez
      @SandySez Год назад +5

      Exactly Sonya. I owned a 100 yr old cottage 3 blocks from the coast in Pinellas Co, my taxes were HIGH! But my (Citizen's only) insurance was even higher. I realized a HUGE % of my property value was the land it was sitting on. I also saw the utter BS insured Floridians go through. No thanks. I've been an uninsured Fla homeowner for 25 yrs. Liability is a vulnerability and I'm going to look into that. BTW, I've applied your logic to my health insurance as well for 35 yrs. The amount of $$ I'd have to cough up out of pocket for either issue would have to be enormous to supercede the $$ I HAVEN'T donated to insurance companies for decades.

    • @fauxque5057
      @fauxque5057 Год назад +2

      @@DylanVBWRX it doesn't work that way. All they want to write is replacement cost insurance. I looked for an agreed value policy and none of the companies would write it

  • @josephdirnfeld3593
    @josephdirnfeld3593 Год назад +23

    Home insurance another racket .

  • @oldroscoe2590
    @oldroscoe2590 Год назад +33

    Farm Bureau said I'd have to insure my vehicles with them in order to continue my homeowners with them. I dropped them and turned in a claim for a roof damage at the same time. They paid for the roof and we parted ways. That was a few years ago and I haven't bothered to carry homeowners insurance since.

  • @yellowbird5411
    @yellowbird5411 3 месяца назад +3

    Two days ago I dropped my home insurance (St. Petersburg). My home insurance jumped $300 since last year, and my rental house jumped $800 since last year. Something had to give, so I gave up mine. People may want to consider that if they put the money into a special account earmarked for insurance, repairs, etc. and just put that money aside, in a couple of years you will have enough to repair a roof, replace a window or two, etc. In talking with the insurance company she said you can just have liability if that is what you want, and that is about $500 a year. That covers "slip and falls" and falling off ladders, etc. but does not cover the house. That is what I am going to do in June. I am switching my rental house over to "liability only" so the tenants who live there are taken care of. If the house blows away, the lot itself is worth about $190,000, according to local lots for sale right now. The land is not going anywhere, so check your local lots and see what it's worth. With that money you can choose to rent if you want, or you can buy a mobile home. It is a gamble, for sure, but if you have extra money, and you don't care about leaving a lot of it to your kids or whatever, then do what's right for you. I know two people who have no insurance. One of them is relatively poor, and the other one lives in an exclusive area. People are fed up, and the real estate person said, when I asked whether people are dropping their insurance, said, "Oh, yes. About 5%." That is now, and I wonder how many dropped it last year, and the year before and the year before. My friend's insurance jumped from $8,000 a year to $18,000 a year. She got them down to $12,000, but decided to sell her home instead. She downsized into a lovely home, and she said she may just get liability insurance. She's not sure yet.

  • @rafars2246
    @rafars2246 Год назад +10

    Paying insurance makes zero sense. It is a business, the possibility of you using the insurance for something higher than what you pay every year is 99.99999% unlikely to happen.

    • @lh3428
      @lh3428 19 дней назад

      Cite your source for that. Numerous people in my area have had their homes damaged. Falling trees, fire, and water damage and hail damage are the most common threats. 1400 homes were just destroyed in a wildfire. Some areas are high risk.

    • @rafars2246
      @rafars2246 19 дней назад

      @@lh3428 Source? LOOOOL

  • @nowthatsfunny1
    @nowthatsfunny1 Год назад +13

    My friend who was elderly had 4 units in a 6 unit building. He owned for a long time. Someone's unit burned down the entire building. He said the HOA was supposed to be paying for home insurance but they didn't have any. So he lost 1 million overnight. I had just paid off my house and was thinking of self insuring but that incident changed my mind. My 1150 sqft house in northeast florida in 1997 was $580 per year...today its $4000 yearly. Lived in my house 25 years only had 1 claim during hurricane Ivan, got 8k for repairs. I have 0 confidence insurance will be solved. Once insurance make this kind of money they'll never let go of it. The Air b&b's and rentals use insurance as general maintenance repair money. So much fraud now because people are corrupt and lawless.

    • @nowthatsfunny1
      @nowthatsfunny1 Год назад +1

      Oh here is another thing that happens here which nobody knows about but i know because I've lived in Florida my whole life AND been through all insurance companies tricks. Most homeowners have had policies canceled 2-3 times. Well the first time they enacted the wind mitigation discounts were back after hurricane Ivan. People paid for inspections and got decent discounts. Well fast forward after 2-3 insurance companies going bankrupt and me being placed automatically into other insurance provider.....the wind mitigation doesn't transfer so those discounts disappear. THEN you have to get reinspected but most roofs are around the 10-15 mark and thats what will fail people. Insurance companies are now instantly changing the rules per customer. So to get lower insurance you need new roof, new water heater, up graded electrical, no dangerous dog, no hot tub, no diving board...etc. etc.

    • @gregabrams5792
      @gregabrams5792 7 месяцев назад

      Are you going to quit paying home owners insurance?

    • @jessiesheldon-huffey1824
      @jessiesheldon-huffey1824 7 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@nowthatsfunny1yep, insurance is no longer worth it. I will take on the risk since they deny claims anyway. 90% of claims initially denied

    • @tyrejuan8
      @tyrejuan8 4 месяца назад

      Wow he should have known the HOA didn't have insurance though? Same thing in Australia now, if you make a claim for even just a burst pipe and some damage they will never insure you for water damage again.

  • @TV-rm8zc
    @TV-rm8zc Год назад +10

    Homeowners insurance is going up because the years there were no storms the CEO's we're getting large million $$ bonuses. So the money was drained out instead of setting aside for the future of a storm. The excuse they use doesn't make sense that it was due to fraudulent lawsuits. How can the same issue be not only in Florida but it is nationwide and worldwide. Look at Australia and other countries as well. When something doesn't make sense it is not the truth. CEOs were getting millions in bonuses but were paid a six figure salary. Think of all the premiums people had been paying yearly and how many homes there are, that is a very significant amount of money and a lot of the majority of homeowners haven't even made a claim in decades. So really where has the money gone that people pay all those premiums all those years.

    • @grumpyschnauzer
      @grumpyschnauzer 3 месяца назад

      Basically what you're describing is not an insurance company but a really corrupt and overpaid HOA.

    • @davidcarp5935
      @davidcarp5935 2 месяца назад +1

      And they probably invested that $ too along the way

  • @veganc5028
    @veganc5028 Год назад +8

    A friend of mine and her husband has not had home insurance for 25 years and everything is fine.

    • @karmasutra4774
      @karmasutra4774 7 месяцев назад

      My aunt didn't carry insurance on a property we had in the family and the whole thing burned in a fire and nothing could be saved. Have to sue the neighbors since the fire was started by them.
      It had been off insurance for 30+ years, but it eventually happened
      I am considering dropping mine too

    • @yellowbird5411
      @yellowbird5411 3 месяца назад

      @@karmasutra4774 Put the money in a savings account earmarked for your home, and don't spend it.

    • @rjrocks6345
      @rjrocks6345 2 месяца назад

      It's risk/ reward. My whole life I've made one claim for a new roof! So 30 plus years of paying premiums, so far, resulted in one roof being replaced. 🤷

    • @yellowbird5411
      @yellowbird5411 2 месяца назад

      @@rjrocks6345 I've never made a claim in over 30 years. I also just dropped my insurance. The second home is dropping to liability only in June.

  • @jjbww0811
    @jjbww0811 Год назад +9

    I'm strongly considering dropping my home owners insurance. We have a rental town home for a little over 3 years now. Recently some damage occurred to the roof. I had them come out to inspect. They want to charge me over $1,000 for 5 singles to be replaced and a small water sport in the garage. What we have paid in insurance over that time, would have paid for a new roof rather than fight with insurance to do their job. It's a scam.

    • @hokeywolf3416
      @hokeywolf3416 6 месяцев назад +2

      Just buy liability

    • @yellowbird5411
      @yellowbird5411 3 месяца назад +1

      A handyman can replace a few shingles and repair the roof leak. Sometimes it's not worth messing with insurance companies over small repairs.

    • @philliphays4284
      @philliphays4284 3 месяца назад +1

      your policy has a deductible. You pay all cost up to the amount of your deductible. Your insurance company doesn't charge you anything. The damage you describe fairly priced will probably not exceed your deductible. You should read your policy and ask your agent questions that occur to you. Your policy is a contract. you signed it. I mean this kindly. practically no one reads their policy before a loss and it is usually to their detriment. understand your deductible, limits and exclusions. deductibles are chosen by you. limits can be raised in most cases, exclusions can be modified by endorsements.

  • @aeg894
    @aeg894 Год назад +4

    My husband almost stopped wearing his Barclay sunglasses after your last 2 episodes. He is happy you rocked em again.

  • @stphinkle
    @stphinkle Год назад +8

    I suspect the number of uninsured homeowners will increase because I read in Florida, California, Louisiana, and other places, insurance companies have dropped homeowners, some even left the states, and others went out of business entirely. Climate change, killer storms, litigation, high fire danger, and other reasons have been cited for insurers dropping policies, leaving certain states or areas, and/or going out of business entirely. It has reached crisis levels in some states. Some people are having to go with insurers of last resort such as the California Fair Plan, Citizens Insurance (owned by the State of Florida), and others.

    • @jameswhite1657
      @jameswhite1657 Месяц назад

      It’s inflation I suspect and an outright shakedown

  • @shumatsuopost
    @shumatsuopost Год назад +1

    Always love how you elaborate the things you tackle in your videos!

  • @EastsideGardening
    @EastsideGardening Год назад +6

    Self insuring a house might make sense if you're planning to do a total remodel on it or even tear it down and rebuild in the future.

  • @mattanderson6672
    @mattanderson6672 Год назад

    Thanks Mich

  • @emzywillrich7243
    @emzywillrich7243 Год назад +3

    Welcome back Superstar! Thanks for your insurance discussion.

  • @jgilldrafting
    @jgilldrafting Год назад +8

    People on low and fixed incomes are going to be forced to pay for insurance instead of needed repairs. You can buy a new roof for what you pay for insurance in just a couple years. What's it going to be, a new roof or new HVAC or new wiring or some peace of mind knowing you have insurance? Insurance company going to dump you for not doing repairs anyway, so you don't even get the peace of mind.

  • @HialeahRefugee
    @HialeahRefugee Год назад +1

    Thanks again

  • @beatakowalczyk7806
    @beatakowalczyk7806 Год назад +1

    Thanks Michael 👍

  • @randallhorres4213
    @randallhorres4213 Год назад +4

    I went without it 12 years after insurance company said i had to get rid of my kids trampoline

  • @oneemotiva4975
    @oneemotiva4975 Год назад +9

    Hi Michael, a friend of mine, owns all his properties no loans all paid. He decided to take the risk and not insure any properties in Miami. If you rent from him, he requests that you have your own renters insurance, before renting the property. For him after living in Miami 25 years and never had any issues is a calculated risk. So no insurance for him at ridiculous prices. I am thinking of doing the same as all my properties are paid off as well. That is the main reason I would never buy condos, in top of lack of privacy, noise and other issues, no interest, you do not own anything then the air in the middle, no thank you.

    • @MichaelBordenaro
      @MichaelBordenaro  Год назад

      That does sound quite risky, he has just gotten lucky for sure.

    • @oneemotiva4975
      @oneemotiva4975 Год назад

      @@MichaelBordenaro Maybe, but all fully paid, no loans. He is very rich, and probably will see it as a opportunity to rebuilt, so I guess he does not care.

    • @brookyogini6625
      @brookyogini6625 11 месяцев назад

      Doing the same in central Florida with my primary residence. A single family home.

    • @oneemotiva4975
      @oneemotiva4975 11 месяцев назад

      @@brookyogini6625 yes many people with no mortgage are now doing that. We take the risk, and have the money to rebuild in any case. I decided to follow is steps. The issue is now that many renters cannot get renters insurance either.

    • @oneemotiva4975
      @oneemotiva4975 11 месяцев назад

      @@MichaelBordenaro Well not for us, we do have the money to rebuild, so no issue there. The problem now, is that many renters in Florida can no longer get renters insurance either.

  • @tomkopf4534
    @tomkopf4534 Год назад +11

    Feeling blessed I've owned my home for 20 years I have AAA started out at 650 into this day it's only 800 they're a good company

  • @unklewink
    @unklewink Год назад +2

    I live in a senior condo community. I own my unit outright, but still required by the association to carry a minimum of 100k liability coverage.

  • @quick-and-easy
    @quick-and-easy Год назад +5

    Thank you great video about insurance. I am a treasurer of two HOA's in Virginia and can tell you HOA policies are NOT unlimited has to be reasonable and not infringe on the owners "quite enjoyment" of their property. Most courts have been ruling AGAINST HOA's for a number of years and been limiting their authority. Owned a condo in FL without insurance as the policy there was 25 TIMES more expensive than Virginia. The master condo HOA would pay for everything to the walls. The best policy I could find in FL was $700 for $2000 (TOTAL) of coverage versus $600 for $500,000 coverage in VA. Again 25 TIMES more expensive. Best option to avoid HOA's and self insure.

    • @MichaelBordenaro
      @MichaelBordenaro  Год назад

      You’re welcome Vincent. That’s right they’re not unlimited but sometimes the things these guys come up with is insane

  • @jonahhex9620
    @jonahhex9620 Год назад +1

    Sucks up here in NYC can’t wait to get back to FL. Happy 🎉 New Year

  • @uverex251
    @uverex251 Год назад +4

    The man with the plan!!!!

  • @marimercy14
    @marimercy14 Год назад +7

    Minute i pay off the house, im canceling insurances. Been paying ins since 1994 with zero claims. Imagine if all those payments I had as a savings account. My mortgage just went up $200 a month cause of escrow. Every year it goes up cause of insurances. I am so done!!

    • @elgato7824
      @elgato7824 Год назад +2

      I finished paying mine off 3 yrs ago. Cancelled my insurance and that phone call was extremely rewarding.

    • @marimercy14
      @marimercy14 Год назад

      @@elgato7824 when I grow up, I want to be just like you!! Lol. Im almost there. Have 5 more years but Trying to save so I can pay off the end in one lump sum.

    • @MichaelBordenaro
      @MichaelBordenaro  Год назад

      I know and the worst part is, I’ve had people write me and tell me they paid the insurance premiums for 20+ years and then one day they cancel your policy. Then all that money is just gone.

    • @rockymntain
      @rockymntain 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@marimercy14 Some insurance companies offer a discount for paid off homes. It's an enticement to keep insuring, even though its only a hundred off.

    • @marimercy14
      @marimercy14 9 месяцев назад

      @@rockymntain thank you. Didnt know

  • @TimmyCramer
    @TimmyCramer Год назад +8

    On my home I pay $550 a year and that's with a $7500 deductible per I don't have a mortgage thanks to Mom! I also don't have medical insurance per they doubled my premium when I turned 45. Most insurance is a scam as they peddle Fear!! Timmy C Arizona

    • @DylanVBWRX
      @DylanVBWRX Год назад

      Timmy,
      I would recommend looking into a short term medical insurance it's under $100/mo it's also called emergency medical high deductible just for emergency. Good to have for sure

  • @johnjaco5544
    @johnjaco5544 Год назад +1

    Good one.

  • @davidshock2259
    @davidshock2259 Год назад +13

    My main concern of going without HO ins is lack of general liability coverage. Can't get an umbrella policy without an underlying general policy.

    • @andreaberryman5354
      @andreaberryman5354 Год назад +1

      HO IS the entire umbrella policy, and none of it is "general". You cannot hold weather and fires "liable" like you can a driver.

    • @davidshock2259
      @davidshock2259 Год назад +4

      @@andreaberryman5354 umbrellas cover things like defamation, etc, that are not usually covered by regular HO ins.

    • @jessiesheldon-huffey1824
      @jessiesheldon-huffey1824 7 месяцев назад

      If you properly structure your assets in trusts, etc. You are not a viable lawsuit target

    • @Ed-lw9xf
      @Ed-lw9xf 4 месяца назад

      Just another example of insurance corporate lawyers that are in Tallahassee changing the laws and taking advantage.
      Example pip and liability for auto insurance, we should have a choice of what and how much we want to insure for our homes !

    • @toupoutou2175
      @toupoutou2175 2 месяца назад

      Texas here, got un renewed, premium rising between 5-7k with poor surplus line policies... how to get a liability insurance without HO insurance? Can I rent my home to myself at will?
      Where can I split the liability risks and buy it from somewhere else?

  • @selfmade7411
    @selfmade7411 Год назад +2

    Keep it going! Great job

  • @shayl1951
    @shayl1951 Год назад +1

    You and Lizzie have a very bless Happy New Year ❤️❤️

  • @owenshea2367
    @owenshea2367 Год назад

    The Michael Burry of homeowners insurance market. Keep up the hard work brother

  • @stephanie_stewart
    @stephanie_stewart Год назад +2

    Own home in wesr kendall, have insurance but dropped wind...it went through andrew. But still 2800. On federal canal so have flood of course. Want 8000+ with wind. The 3 years saved can replace roof
    Love Miami!

  • @allynnichols8460
    @allynnichols8460 8 месяцев назад +3

    My issue in the desert of so Cal, is not cost. It’s that terrible fires and disastrous snow damage last year, are causing ins cos to refuse new clients. And the customers that are there are being inspected and forced to do onerous retrofits. Ie boxing in eaves. Having six inches of the bottom of the home siding being covered w rock or other non combustible material. In the desert. What do you do if in’s companies aren’t interested in your rural property? I’ve been on the phone nonstop. The contractors locally are not taking small jobs and are scratching their heads over the requirements.
    If it’s a policy statewide, why aren’t I reading all about this online or FB? Seems like many homeowners would be having similar problems. Against my will, I may also have to take a chance w no ins.

    • @allynnichols8460
      @allynnichols8460 8 месяцев назад +1

      And I forgot. Half a dozen refused to consider my homeowners, simply because I live in a little desert area that is redlined. Flo or the Geiko lizard won’t touch my home.

  • @marks6072
    @marks6072 Год назад +11

    My neighbor had his insurance co demand he put on a new roof to maintain eligibility on current annual $2000 premium.. Concrete tile replacement was $55k and he refused,,, New home owners premium now $7000/yr... Mike you da man for packing so much useful info in this vid!!!

    • @owenannabel9257
      @owenannabel9257 Год назад +1

      Wow! How's that possible please I'll appreciate your assistance on how to go about it.

    • @lindaromero4921
      @lindaromero4921 Год назад +1

      That's awesome. I dealt with crypto last year on Robinhood, tried some index but didn't take it out so I lost it by the end. Any consistent strategies Or good broker recommendations ?

    • @napoleonollis7247
      @napoleonollis7247 Год назад +1

      Consistently investing with proper guidance in quality dividend paying companies is a relatively easy strategy to create wealth. Well I copy trades from daily signals of Mrs Brittney May Goad as recommended here previously

    • @nellagoode1499
      @nellagoode1499 Год назад +1

      People prefer to spend money on liabilities, Rather than investing in assets and be very profitable.

    • @bankerlies6121
      @bankerlies6121 Год назад +1

      They make billions a year,based on your ignorance

  • @danielghoganjr
    @danielghoganjr Год назад +3

    I used Geico Insurance for years. I purchased a Toyota corolla, with which I hit a huge mule deer jumping crossing the highway. Car was totaled and was paid out to me, liability. Then I purchased a ford F150. Someone broke into my apartment, found the spare key to the F150, loaded my belongings into the F150, then stole most everything. Once again, the vehicle was paid out to me, liability. Two years later I purchased a motorcycle and asked them for a quote. Geico told me it would be $300 per month. I called progressive and they gave me a quote of $300 per year. Obviously, I went with $300 per year. I switched everything over to progressive insurance because of that B/S. Insurance agents are sharks, and it is a "for profit business". Just know that they are not out for you best interest. I'm glad I had insurance at the time, but they're out to make as much money as possible.

  • @teddyknight4762
    @teddyknight4762 Год назад

    Hi Michael, like your video, have a great day 😊💟💟😊😊😊😊

  • @libertas556
    @libertas556 Год назад +2

    Yeah I know bro! It was rough over here in Venice. Got down to 31 at night.

  • @repo4sale
    @repo4sale Год назад

    I self insured since 1991 for all my real estate 28,000 acres bought and sold, 1000+ escrows! But only 3 of my past 40 boats and vehicles.... States are terrible when it comes to Deposits for self insurance..

  • @jquint57
    @jquint57 Год назад +4

    The solution to high prices is high prices. Home owner insurance demand is going to drop drastically. Insurance prices will drop over time due to slack demand. People really need to use insurance for true disaster recovery purposes and use a high deductible, say $5,000 or higher.

  • @CarlWithACamera
    @CarlWithACamera Год назад +12

    I self insured for seven years in Florida. My conditions were:
    1. A condo I paid $181k cash for. If it were a house, where someone could walk onto my lawn and fall down and sue me for injury liability, there's no way I'd have self-insured.
    2. Condo association held a master policy to rebuild up to the studs. I estimated it would cost me about $50-60k to build out the interior after the master policy would cover rebuilding the building (assuming it burned down or was otherwise destroyed). If the condo association didn't hold a master policy to cover the building and grounds or if I didn't have hundreds of thousands of dollars in savings to draw from should I need to rebuild the interior, I'd have never considered self insuring.
    3. (This is very important). The only people I ever had over were my mom, my brother and his wife and my girlfriend. So I limited the chance someone would come in and slip and fall and sue me. I didn't know many people in Florida as I'd moved down from Massachusetts. If I had guests over all the time there's no way I'd have self-insured.
    As you can see, you have to have just the right conditions before you should consider self insuring.

    • @MichaelBordenaro
      @MichaelBordenaro  Год назад +1

      Sounds like a smart and reasonable chance to take

    • @jjohnson8977
      @jjohnson8977 Год назад +2

      how about if a fire started in your unit you could be sued for millions for liablitly claims

    • @CarlWithACamera
      @CarlWithACamera Год назад +1

      @@jjohnson8977 that's true. Self insuring is a risk, but so is being underinsured, which might be the case for a large percentage of those who carry a policy in the scenario you put forth.
      I was underinsured once on my car insurance. While slowing for a light, a motorcycle suddenly pulled in front of me and then, seeing the light turning red, decided to slam on his breaks. He stoped a lot faster than my car could and so his rear wheel ended up embedded in my front end. So much so that the hood of my car came into abrupt contact with the underside of his seat, sending him flying at least eight feet into the air before his body slammed straight back down onto the pavement beside his still upright bike (the bike never tipped over, being held upright by the front end of my car wrapped tightly around the rear wheel). He was a large and very heavy guy, and so the fear was that his weight, dropped from such a height, would cause severe injuries. And he did sue me, getting one of those injury lawyers who advertise on TV and billboards. I have only $20k coverage for injuries. I thought it might come to a couple hundred thousand.
      In the end my contention that he pulled in front of me was rejected as he had two friends there on their bikes who lied and reported to the police that he was driving straight and I simply slammed into him. I was found at fault for the accident. However, I caught a break. He didn't follow up on doctor appointments after initially being brought to the hospital that night. So my insurance company's attorneys were able ti successfully argue he couldn't have suffered from his injuries. In the end he settled for the exact amount of my coverage; $20k. There wasn't even damage to his bike, so that cost me nothing. But it did teach me that there are times you don't want to hold too much risk.

  • @arturoandlizvillareal6086
    @arturoandlizvillareal6086 5 месяцев назад

    Love the old cars

  • @cryptojuan5897
    @cryptojuan5897 Год назад +3

    Paid off Home and will self insure .

  • @xsterawesome
    @xsterawesome Год назад +4

    I don't get why people have such a hard time with the self-insurance question, if you can afford to do whatever the insurance would do for you it's a no-brainer for example if you got wheel insurance for 40 bucks a month and you can replace all four of your wheels for $1,500 as long as you have $1,500 set aside for things like this odds are your better off not getting the insurance that's literally how the insurance companies make a profit odds are you're going to pay them more than they're going to pay you.
    It gets even better when you start using odds instead of the worst case scenario in the previous example odds are you would never destroy all four wheels so all you really need to do is worry about what's most likely an adjust for your comfort zone if you want to you may be comfortable saying it's unlikely that I'm going to do more than damage two wheels beyond repair, and one within. In that case you only need to save enough money to replace two wheels and repair scratches on one.
    I think when it comes to cases of liability you should do the same, moving on to a house most likely the most you'll ever be on the hook for is a slip and fall or someone getting bit by your dog, you can figure out what rehab for those costs in your area and add a little bit on top, but it's extremely unlikely that someone will sue you for 55 million over something that took place on your property.
    It's extremely unlikely that your house will be reduced to rubble and you have to pay to remove it all and build a new house from scratch, at the very least there should be a foundation which is worth a pretty penny but realistically the most common thing you're going to lose is your roof I'm considering you already have to budget to redo those regularly if you own a house you probably just need to bump that up more to do a little more extensive repair. Etc
    In conclusion, if you're thinking about self-insuring, you probably should. As an added bonus the more you self-insure the more you end up having extra money saved. Start small, next time you buy a phone, electronic, or appliance, don't get the warranty the same time you buy it put enough money aside to buy another one just like it.
    It's unlikely that you're refrigerator phone computer TV and car will all break down at the same time so at some point you don't have to have a pool of money big enough to replace everything in your life at once.

  • @YakMotley
    @YakMotley Год назад +4

    I own my house free and clear, I will drop my insurance most likely.

  • @prettygirlus9008
    @prettygirlus9008 6 месяцев назад

    My Dad just dropped windstorm/hurricane coverage, but retained everything else, including $100K personal liability, and lowered his property insurance from $3000 to $1500. I haven't carried property insurance for over ten years, but just got a quote for $300K personal liability for $400.

  • @grjones520
    @grjones520 7 дней назад

    I was quoted for liability and fire insurance for $300 bucks vs. 4K for a normal policy for the year.

  • @NormanAllan53
    @NormanAllan53 Год назад +1

    So glad you clarifide the reality that inspite of all the bad news about insurance companies there are still some good ones..Most are ready to pounce on consumers with crazy rates.If you stick to your guns reasonable rate increases can be found. You just have to play their game and fight back....

  • @magiccheeseball
    @magiccheeseball Год назад

    My friend's daughter lives in Kissimmee she had 4 feet deep water in her house during the last hurricane Kissimmee is very low lying it's a reason has big lakes that are very shallow with a lot of marshy areas

  • @j4513
    @j4513 Год назад +18

    “The real Michael has made his comeback.”
    😂

  • @Ray-zy1hp
    @Ray-zy1hp Год назад +12

    Great video Michael, if you currently have home owners insurance and decide to lapse.. when you goto reinstate your home policy down the road, the carrier will likely note the lapse in your records even if you move to another home. The lapse could lead to higher insurance premiums since your carrier may find you riskier to insure because you went without coverage for a certain period and considered a criminal.

    • @MichaelBordenaro
      @MichaelBordenaro  Год назад +11

      That in itself is a criminal act by the insurance company! These guys will look for any excuse to raise the premium.

    • @kristenspencer9751
      @kristenspencer9751 Год назад

      @@MichaelBordenaro true! In the past, if I missed a payment, the next month's bill would reflect the extra cost. Now, they just cancel if a payment is late. And charge a fee to re-instate!

    • @kristenspencer9751
      @kristenspencer9751 Год назад +3

      Allstate will no longer accept cash payment. One time when I was between jobs, out of checks, I had sold some art and thankfully had just the exact amount of cash to pay my home insurance at the local office. I was sooo grateful to be able to pay it! But the office mgr refused my cash, thus making me late. And my policy was cnx'd. Terribly treatment of an older, low income person and long time customer.

    • @DylanVBWRX
      @DylanVBWRX Год назад +3

      @@kristenspencer9751 easy solution would be okay pay $1 get a cashier's check.

    • @DylanVBWRX
      @DylanVBWRX Год назад +1

      @@MichaelBordenaropeople with lapses in coverage have proven to carry a higher risk of fraud. That's why it's more expensive when you lapse.

  • @jongonegone1262
    @jongonegone1262 7 месяцев назад

    it depends how lucky you feel !!!

  • @davidholmes9643
    @davidholmes9643 Год назад +1

    Hi Michael Have a look at Daily Mail online today UK Newspaper 2 Articles worth reading one is on EV cars the other is on Crypto regarding the Twins

  • @a46222
    @a46222 5 месяцев назад +1

    I paid 1500 a year in 2012. Today I pay 5500 a year. Same policy, same agent, same everything and 1 claim in 12 years

    • @rjrocks6345
      @rjrocks6345 2 месяца назад

      You should probably shop around. It's time.

  • @ScottLive1
    @ScottLive1 Год назад +1

    Company won't grant me the "privilege" of being insured on my older home unless I update all plumbing. Roof coverage is now prorated. And of course separate hurricane deductible. After that it's $8k per year. Love our governor but he didn't go far enough on this.

  • @joeythedime1838
    @joeythedime1838 2 месяца назад

    I am in Punta Gorda, FL, which took a direct hit from hurricane Ian. My homeowners insurance was dropped by my carrier. It was $5k a year. Shopping for a new policy I am getting quotes at $12k annually. This is not sustainable. My flood policy renewal is also going up to $5k, so $17k a year for home coverage is insane. I am electing to semi self-insure, by going to a middle ground and just getting hazard only coverage, which has all the common causes of lose covered except for hurricanes and windstorms. This is an excellent option that you can talk to your broker about. My hazard only policy is ~$2k.

  • @danman1287
    @danman1287 Год назад +2

    The avg joe RE investor whether owner occupant or investor has grossly underpriced the cost of capital for RE. On insurance..it's only as good as your insurer's ability to pay

  • @alanheadrick7997
    @alanheadrick7997 Год назад +12

    My last policy was $3300 a year and I live near Pensacola. One of my rentals I couldn't get coverage so I just got liability for 475 a year.

    • @brianmatthews4149
      @brianmatthews4149 Год назад

      Dam mine is cheap for Cali 1800.00 a year.

    • @alanheadrick7997
      @alanheadrick7997 Год назад +3

      @@brianmatthews4149 Our house is nothing special, 1800 sq' high and dry, no swamp land and no trees to fall on the house and new metal roof.

    • @patricialmt5272
      @patricialmt5272 Год назад

      Can you please do that ? My house is paid off.

    • @alanheadrick7997
      @alanheadrick7997 Год назад +1

      @@patricialmt5272 Ask your agent or check around. I see an old quote from Mount Vernon fire insurance company.

  • @DanL604
    @DanL604 2 месяца назад +1

    California here. Zero claim. Insurance doubled.

    • @akanesoratobu8889
      @akanesoratobu8889 Месяц назад

      same here i was paying around 650 dollar something in 2020 and now its 1500 for that same coverage insuance no claims either in socal

  • @novadhd
    @novadhd Год назад

    I’m staying on west coast of Florida now and you wouldn’t believe what the building insurance policy is for high end place

  • @inquirer1016
    @inquirer1016 Год назад +1

    It's kind of like earthquake insurance in California. Most homeowners won't buy it because it's expensive and the deductible is insanely high. A friend of mine was offered coverage of $500,000 for $1,500 a year and the deductible were $90,000! If the deductible was more normal like $500, more homeowners would buy in.

  • @jamesanderson4696
    @jamesanderson4696 Год назад

    It's 60 degrees today, in d.c.!

  • @hokeywolf3416
    @hokeywolf3416 6 месяцев назад +1

    Also, if you have savings/investments equal to the value of your paid off house.

  • @floydestelle6242
    @floydestelle6242 Месяц назад

    Wisconsin 290,000 house insurance, started out 510 for 200,000, now 570.00 8 years

  • @coffeecup3177
    @coffeecup3177 Год назад +4

    You would also need to carry the Homeowners Insurance if you have an Umbrella Policy.

  • @rogerbec5766
    @rogerbec5766 Месяц назад

    Lots of people mistake their homeowners insurance as a maintenance coverage policy for both personal and structural property. I'll buy that policy if it exist.

  • @jonathannava3397
    @jonathannava3397 Год назад +8

    I’m currently an insurance producer and I’ve seen rates go up insanely. I own my home free and clear but I’m not stupid enough to not have insurance on the property.

    • @jessiesheldon-huffey1824
      @jessiesheldon-huffey1824 7 месяцев назад +3

      It's actually not stupid for everyone to go without insurance. This is based on multiple factors. Unlike in the past, insurers now deny the majority of claims ( even though almost all are valid claims that should be covered), when they do pay claims, they do not pay replacement cost, they pay a percentage of costs depending on how old parts of your home are ( so someone could still get screwed), insurance premiums have doubled in last 5 years. It is actually cheaper for me ( and a lot of homeowners) to just put those would be monthly premium funds into a savings account, and use it if you need to if a part of your home is destroyed. Especially for people like me whose husband is a building contractor, it's definitely better to go without insurance.

    • @rjrocks6345
      @rjrocks6345 2 месяца назад

      It's not stupid. It's a gamble and individual choice. In 30 plus years I've had one roof claim. Who benefits most? The insurance companies usually come out the winner.

  • @SirCarlosMusicBMI
    @SirCarlosMusicBMI Год назад +1

    🎉😮🎉😮🎉😮🎉😮🎉😮
    I have lived in the Nashville area for almost 20 years.
    I HATE PAYING INSURANCE, BUT…
    House # 1 got hit by lightning ⚡️, Blew out several items including my garage opener system, Very expensive BOSE System and many outlets…
    My Insurance company paid to fix and replace EVERYTHING.
    House # 2 plumbers installed the Wrong kind of fireplace logs in my new house. My friend fell asleep on the couch with the fireplace running. Fortunately he awoke to the smoke alarm 🚨. But my Entire house got Smoke Damage. Same insurance company paid thousands and thousands of dollars to dry clean all of my clothes and then wiped down every single surface in the house including inside the cabinets,Closets,Walls and ceiling.
    House # 3 Tornado 🌪️ in Tennessee I think it was 2020 and lifted the house off the foundation and blew away about a Third of my house including my music room which had about 15 Guitar’s , Expensive artwork and tons of recording equipment. I lost so much stuff. Fortunately the last time I was there I happened to take a video of the entire house 😊❗️my insurance company did not want to pay at first but after speaking with the insurance representative I was able to gather all information needed which included receipts for almost everything because this was a new home and I kept a file in a safe place.
    Same insurance company paid to replace the entire house and pay for all my lost items. They also set me up with a nice hotel for over two months until they could get me an apartment. They PAID FOR EVERYTHING ❗️
    So I Hate paying for insurance But thankfully my insurance broker and the representative worked with me and I eventually had a new house 🏡.
    I WOULD NEVER HAVE A HOUSE WITHOUT INSURANCE.
    THANK YOU MICHAEL. , Carlos

  • @FairBeautyEssentials
    @FairBeautyEssentials Год назад +1

    DAMN!!! You see how these Florida insurance is scaring the lights out of me? Yeah, we have to have it because it’s a law. If we have a mortgage, they still screw us over and scams us still but we gotta have home owners insurance. I’m in Augusta, GA. My homeowners insurance is only $637 a year. But you are still scaring me tho Michael!!!

  • @manw3bttcks
    @manw3bttcks 11 месяцев назад +1

    I'm a upper 50's guy that bought my house in the cheap bottom of the house market in 2000, I paid my house off with a 30 year mortgage in about 15 years (2014-2015) or so. Both my car and house are paid off and I have a large savings account... so I'm seriously thinking of dropping HOI. I plan to retire and move out of MD to the midwest in a few years.

  • @deepblue523fl
    @deepblue523fl Год назад +1

    Bought a condo in cash back in 2018. Not buying a condo policy. Figure if the building gets blown down the condo association will cover. Bad enough our condo fees are going way up because of the insurance

    • @DylanVBWRX
      @DylanVBWRX Год назад

      Studs in policies are so cheap literally a few hundred bucks a year. It would make more sense to just have a high deductible and pay the $3-400 a year instead of something happening and shelling out 70k. Just had a clients condo flood from toilet overflowing over $40,000 claim

  • @spiritoftheoceanheartsofna9292
    @spiritoftheoceanheartsofna9292 Год назад +1

    Glad to hear the Quakers didn't freeze to death 🦜

  • @ECUCHRIS904
    @ECUCHRIS904 Год назад

    My home insurance in Florida actually went down for 2023.

  • @sargepent9815
    @sargepent9815 Год назад

    Interesting situation could be unfolding. If the insurance companies refuse to insure collateral (the homes) in Florida, the few companies that do will obviously drive up the costs of premiums as their exposure increases. It will reach a point (like it is now) where premiums are too expensive for home owners. If/when the owners let coverage lapse, the banks will have to either ensure the collateral themselves, or foreclose the mortgage to protect themselves from uninsured losses on their collateral. This in and of itself could cause a housing crisis as buyers won't be able to insure property and banks won't lend when their collateral isn't covered against loss. If a home owner had a 400k mortgage and it was uninsured and suffered total loss damage, that would be a bankruptcy event

  • @gliver2549
    @gliver2549 Год назад

    back in the sunglasses 😎

  • @jhall2264
    @jhall2264 Год назад +2

    The insurers make a reasonable point that most folks don't have the funds to cover a disaster on their own. However, it's a moot point if the insurers won't pay you in the event of a disaster. For an example, see Florida's latest hurricane/flood.

    • @DylanVBWRX
      @DylanVBWRX Год назад +1

      Flooding is covered by FEMA, so that doesn't necessarily apply it would fall under flood insurance which if you're not in a flood zone is only $400-600 a year.

  • @BillonBass
    @BillonBass 10 месяцев назад

    The biggest problem is even getting insurance in FL at any kind of price! Then you make a claim and they don’t pay. I now believe the risk of the insurer not paying is higher than the risk of self insuring at a ridiculous rate. Not worth it.

  • @emzywillrich7243
    @emzywillrich7243 Год назад +1

    The deductible is taken out of the insurance payout. They do try to recover it from the other party if it is a car accident claim.

    • @MichaelBordenaro
      @MichaelBordenaro  Год назад

      Either way, you still need to have that extra cash to make up the difference

    • @emzywillrich7243
      @emzywillrich7243 Год назад +1

      @@MichaelBordenaro I certainly agree!!!

  • @wam122
    @wam122 Год назад +3

    Not all Insurance companies are equal. It's no good to save money on a cheap policy and find out the company was over-extended liability wise and taking on too much risk and unable to cover all your losses etc. Old adage comes to mind if it is too cheap there is probably a reason buyer be ware ... triple A rated or just above junk bond rated and hanging on by a thread. All States are not equal when it comes to Insurance regulations protections and over -site

    • @DylanVBWRX
      @DylanVBWRX Год назад

      Wayne you're 100% correct I always recommend everyone check A.M best to verify the company is A+ rated. Non rated companies go bankrupt every year leaving people without coverage.

  • @Userxyz-z2d
    @Userxyz-z2d Год назад +2

    My homeowners Ins agent was telling me that if a person lets their property ins lapse, most likely no other Ins Comp will take them.

    • @MichaelBordenaro
      @MichaelBordenaro  Год назад

      I wonder whats the deal with that!

    • @DylanVBWRX
      @DylanVBWRX Год назад +1

      Not all, but it does eliminate some options. Statistically if you let it lapse the likelihood of you commiting fraud or attempting to is higher. The reasoning is the insurance companies believe you let it go because you didn't want to pay for it must be a reason you want it now.

  • @stacysteelemarykay4616
    @stacysteelemarykay4616 Год назад +3

    insurance has not gone up yet but tax bill came & its doubled. mortgage payments will be almost double

  • @Gr8thxAlot
    @Gr8thxAlot Год назад +1

    Trust me, an insurance company will never reject the premium. :-)

  • @CynthiaWord-iq7in
    @CynthiaWord-iq7in 2 месяца назад

    New direction. Before going to zero uf hou are afraid (shouldnt be because, even with coverage, they are not paying for your repairs), you COULD offer to keep insurance if rate stays same, with no increase...with a $10k deductible or more.

  • @broncobra
    @broncobra Месяц назад

    I live in a 100 year flood plain. Historically, it has never flooded. I had to pay extra for that? House is like 4-5 foot above ground level. Built in 1900. You have to walk UP
    steps to enter it? Paid off. I't's all a rip off.

  • @jamisonmunn9215
    @jamisonmunn9215 Год назад +2

    You could have insurance all you want but we both know they will never pay you out.

  • @Babegyrl15
    @Babegyrl15 Год назад +1

    I stopped by to see a friend in Port St. Lucie, she said her premium increased from $8K to $14K…and they are west of 95.

    • @brianmatthews4149
      @brianmatthews4149 Год назад

      That's like living in jersey. And how much property taxes.

  • @jakeready64
    @jakeready64 Год назад

    Many homeowners associations require you to have insurance even if you have your house paid for

  • @northernsummer8217
    @northernsummer8217 Год назад +6

    My concern is that without homeowner insurance on owned free and clear house you cannot put that home under an umbrella policy. You have to have at least $300K liability for an umbrella policy to work. Am I wrong? Being able to rebuild the house after catastrophic damage is one thing, protect all your assets is another. Hope more companies will come to FL. Thank you for an informative video.

  • @kennethw6962
    @kennethw6962 Год назад +7

    Michael, how high do the deductibles go in Florida on homeowners insurance? I mean, if I had a $5,000,000 house, I would not want to go without insurance. But if I get a policy with a $50,000 deductible, so they know I'm only calling them in a catastrophe, I would imagine that would be pretty dang affordable compared to what is customary. I know most people tend to have a $500 or $1000 deductible in general. They kind of forgotten what the insurance is for in the 1st place - it's not about fixing a broken window or leaky roof, but the house catching on fire or a pipe bursting and flooding the whole downstairs.

    • @MichaelBordenaro
      @MichaelBordenaro  Год назад

      That’s a good question Ken I don’t have an answer for you. I haven’t seen enough policies to know what the highest deductibles people have

    • @FloridaGirl-
      @FloridaGirl- Год назад

      Most people I know down here have at least a 5,500 deductable. Also I believe it’s 2.3% of the value of the house is about what the desuctible is if I am understanding it correctly. 🤔 with most policies.

    • @DylanVBWRX
      @DylanVBWRX Год назад

      Hey ken, licensed agent here. A higher deductible will certainly save you money. The highest my company offers is 10%, so if your dwelling was 500k that would be a 50k deductible.

    • @DylanVBWRX
      @DylanVBWRX Год назад

      Generally it's 1,2 or 5% of the dwelling, so a 300k dwelling coverage would be 3,6, or a 15,000 deductible. Most people go 1 & 2, so 1% all peril and 2% for wind, hail, and tropical cyclone.

  • @tomkopf4534
    @tomkopf4534 Год назад +6

    When Michael needs to turn his heat on with his tank top and flip flops on the apocalypse is on

  • @djaspurh
    @djaspurh 2 месяца назад

    Call an attorney and hire a public adjuster before filling any claim!

  • @felix2b5
    @felix2b5 Год назад +1

    I'm sure the number one question most people want answered is what will the mortgage company do to people who can't get insurance .

    • @fauxque5057
      @fauxque5057 Год назад +1

      They will buy a policy and add it to your payment. And it's not cheap insurance. They won't shop for a bargain

    • @rockymntain
      @rockymntain 9 месяцев назад

      @@fauxque5057 It's called mortgage insurance. It covers the cost of paying the mortgage. Nothing else is covered.

  • @SC-or2ek
    @SC-or2ek Год назад +2

    home insurance is a must if you live in Florida don't take chance, but if your bet is wrong you could end up homeless👍

  • @brianmatthews4149
    @brianmatthews4149 Год назад

    If I had a nice piece of land and wanted to live amongst those super sized lizard's down there.i would do a 3.d build save at least 30 percent on the build save every year on insurance and the energy bill and let's not forget the mold issues in humid weather.