Today's Insurance News

Updated 24 Hours a Day
Provided By:
Insurance Journal

  National
Bayer Renews Bid for US Supreme Court to Curb Roundup Cases
Hedge Funds Hunt Deals in Risk Scenarios Too Costly for Insurers
World Insurance Associates Acquires Royalty Insurance Services in California
Oracle Tells Clients of Second Recent Hack, Log-In Data Stolen
  East
People Moves: Plymouth Rock Home Names Zygmunt Chief Operating 0fficer
Maryland Lawmakers Send Bill Limiting Sexual Abuse Liabilities to Governor
Maine Approves 9.6% Decrease in Workers' Compensation Costs
Staffers Face Allegations Related to Abuse of Pennsylvania Charter School Students
  Midwest
Meta Plans Nearly $1 Billion Data Center Project in Wisconsin
$2M Settlement Reached in Death of Young Woman at North Dakota Jail
Microsoft Pulls Back on Data Centers From Chicago to Jakarta
Kansas' Key Insurance Placed Into Liquidation
  Southeast
Consultant Sheds Some Light on MGA Fee Report at Florida Legislative Hearing
South Carolina DOI Names Noga, Formerly With GuideOne, as Captives Director
Deadly Storms Bring Flooding and Destruction to Southeast, Midwest
North Carolina Appeals Court Won't Budge on Intrepid Insurance Name Mix-up
  Southcentral
Chevron Ordered to Pay $744M for Damaging Louisiana Wetlands
Texas Judge Awards $6.6M to Former Aides Fired by AG Paxton
People Moves: Conyers Joins Brown & Riding's Environmental Practice Leadership
Dallas Fed Warns of Slowing Growth in Trade-Reliant Texas
  West
Death Toll From Los Angeles Wildfires Reaches 30
People Moves: BTIS Promotes Keefe to SVP, Head of Operations
Newsom Says California to Seek Tariff Exemptions From Allies
People Moves: Bayern Joins Alliant Insurance Services as SVP in Denver
  International
Women in UK Financial Services Still Earn a Fifth Less Than Men
Buyer-Friendly April Reinsurance Renewal Bodes Well for Mid-Year Renewals: Brokers
Peak Re Granted License to Open Reinsurance Branch in India
Leaked Files Raise Fears About Shell Oil Production Fleet, Years After Devastating Spill
More Insurance News
HotelsCombined.com

Insurance Search Engine

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Do You Have Enough Jewelry Insurance?

Jewelry insurance comes in many forms and varieties and only an insurance agent can provide accurate and specific advice. However, it helps to know enough about jewelry insurance to ask your agent the right questions and to be aware of how the process works. The time to ask your insurance agent the questions is before you insure an item, not when you need to file a claim. Read the fine print in your insurance contract to be sure it provides the coverage you expect.

Understanding jewelry insurance begins with recognizing the difference between scheduled and unscheduled property.

Unscheduled property (jewelry not specifically listed) is typically included in basic homeowner or renter’s policies under blanket coverage. There is a usually a deductible (typically $500) and a maximum amount of coverage (typically $1500) although these amounts can vary with the specific policy. This type of coverage does not require an appraisal but sales receipts, written descriptions or photos are beneficial in proving the items existed and estimating their replacement value.

Scheduled property (jewelry specifically listed) is included in a floater, rider or endorsement to homeowner or renter’s policies. Jewelry insurance is also available with a separate policy, from a company specializing in jewelry insurance. For scheduled property, the insurance appraisal is vital because it describes the jewelry item and provides the “insured value” that is used in determining the premium you will pay to insure the item each year. Most scheduled property policies do not have an automatic appreciation adjustment as is common for the house and other unscheduled property. Therefore, even if it might cost 50% more to replace an item in five years, the “insured value” is still only that stated in the appraisal.

If you file an insurance claim, the settlement process and amount paid will depend on the policy and in particular, if the policy allows replacement or agreed value settlement. For agreed value policies, the settlement amount is stated in the policy whereas replacement value allows the insurance company to replace your jewelry or make a cash settlement based on the insurance company’s cost to replace your item. The insurance company’s liability ceiling is set at the “insured value” on the appraisal.

Do you have enough jewelry insurance? The answer depends on what kind of policy you have, the “insured value” is on the appraisal, the settlement procedure is for your particular policy, and the accuracy of the information on your appraisal. If you have a jewelry item valued at more than the $1500, you should definitely consider scheduled as opposed to unscheduled coverage.

The critical issue for scheduled property coverage is the how accurate is the information on the appraisal.

1) If the information on the appraisal is vague and general, the insurance company can replace the item with an item that satisfies the description but perhaps is not the quality and true value of the lost item. Be sure your jewelry appraisal has a detailed and accurate description of the jewelry item.

2) If the appraisal value is artificially high, the insurance company can replace the item at their cost even though the client paid premiums for years on a value twice as much. This is often the case for purchases from a jewelry store with prices double other retailers and the store provides an insurance appraisal even higher than the purchase price. You do not need an appraised value more than 150% of the price you would pay at low priced online retailer.

3) If the appraisal value is too low, the insurance company can make cash settlement that might not cover the current replacement cost of the item. This could be the case for items purchased three or four years ago from a low price online retailer and the appraised value was at or below the purchase price. With diamond prices increasing about 10% a year recently, it does not take long for appraisal values to be out of date if too close to online retail purchase prices. Be sure to have your jewelry insurance appraisal updated every four or five years so you do not end up underinsured.

Private Policy

I value your privacy as much as you do. Any information you share with this site will not be sold, traded, bartered or given away, but will be used to contact you. I may use this information to tell you about recommended products and services that I think will help you.