Test Scoring
Answers:
- TRUE. Our coverage assures
your insurance will pay what it costs (up to policy limits) to
rebuild the house at today's prices.
- FALSE A valued coverage agreement means
the insurer will pay you exactly the amount for which an item
is insured. If the item or items increase in value, you'll still
only get the agreed-upon coverage amount.
- TRUE These potential disasters are area-specific
and not included in most standard policies. Flood insurance is
usually a separate policy, while earthquakes can be covered by
purchasing an endorsement to an existing policy.
- TRUE Most experts agree that
renter's liability coverage should be comparable to that of a
homeowner in today's lawsuit-filled society.
- FALSE. Any damage or liability
arising from a home-based business pursuit will likely not be
covered under a standard policy. Additional coverage, called "incidental
office occupancy" coverage can help in this situation.
- D - All of the Above Many homeowners think
about home insurance only at settlement or annual renewal, so
they often forget to evaluate changing coverage needs. Others
simply fail to read their policy in its entirety.
- A - The Living Room Although more fires
start in the kitchen than any other room, more fatal fires begin
in living rooms or family rooms. And careless smoking is often
the culprit, according to The Journal of American Insurance.
- C - Size of Lot The land under your house
isn't at risk from fire, windstorm, lightning, theft, and the
other perils covered in your policy. Its value should not affect
the amount of insurance you buy.
- E - A & C Above. This
according to a survey of professional burglars published in Boardroom
Classics' The Big Black Book of Secrets.
- 1-E; 2-B; 3-D; 4-A; 5-C
Scoring:
Questions 1-5: 1 point for each correct TRUE/FALSE
answer;
Questions 6-9: 2 points for each
correct multiple choice answer;
Questions 10: 1 point for each correct
match.
If you scored 15-18, you're
practically a home insurance expert (you may want to visit our upcoming
Homesite job opportunities section).
If you scored 10-14, you're
a pretty savvy homeowner with a thing or two to improve upon.
If you scored less than 9, you
need some help. Fortunately, you've come to the right web site!
Sources: Independent Insurance Network; Journal of American
Insurance; moneycentral.msn.com web site; Boardroom Classics' The
Big Black Book.
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