Earthquake Insurance (California)
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We have Earthquake Insurance for
Commercial Buildings including Condominium Associations,
Apartments, Elderly Housing, office Buildings, Retail
buildings, and Hotels/motels.
This portion of website is taken of CEA
site with permission in order to inform potential clients.
Homeowner
The CEA homeowners policy is designed
to help get you back into your home after an earthquake. The
CEA base-limits policy for homeowners includes:
Dwelling coverage - The coverage limit is the insured value
of your home stated on your companion homeowner policy.
Personal Property coverage - $5,000
Additional Living
Expense/Loss of Use coverage - $1,500
You may select
either a 10% or 15% deductible on your Dwelling coverage,
and CEA’s increased-limit options allow you to increase
Personal Property coverage to as much as $100,000 and
Additional Living Expense/Loss of Use coverage to as much as
$15,000.
Your CEA policy contains exclusions and
special limits of coverage—read the entire policy to become
familiar with what is and is not covered. If you still have
questions about your CEA policy after reading the
information on our Web site, please contact your insurance
agent or your homeowners insurance company.
Personal Property Coverage (Coverage C)
Personal
Property coverage protects many items in the typical home,
including furniture, TVs, audio and video equipment,
household appliances, bedding, and clothing.
A base
policy provides up to $5,000 to replace personal property,
but you can increase your Personal Property coverage to as
much as $100,000.
Dwelling Coverage (Coverage A)
Dwelling coverage helps protect the investment you
have made in your home. It will help pay to repair or, (up
to the policy limit) replace, an insured home when
structural damage exceeds the policy deductible. You may
select a 10% or 15% deductible for your Dwelling coverage.
The insured value of your home, as stated on the
declarations page of your companion homeowners insurance
policy, determines the Dwelling-coverage limit of your CEA
earthquake policy. If your home's insured value changes in
your homeowners policy, the insured value for your
earthquake coverage will change, too, and that will affect
your earthquake-policy premium.
Personal Property
Coverage: Increased-Limit Options
Base
Coverage
Option
1 Option
2 Option
3 Option
4
$5,000
$25,000 $50,000 $75,000 $100,000
Additional Living
Expense/Loss of Use Coverage (Coverage D)
If damage
from an earthquake prevents you from living in your home,
your CEA policy may pay for necessary increases in living
expenses you incur to maintain your normal standard of
living.
CEA Additional Living Expense/Loss of Use
coverage on a property you own and rent to tenants can help
protect your rental income, to the limit of that coverage.
A base policy provides $1,500 of Additional Living
Expense coverage or you can increase that coverage to as
much as $15,000.
Additional Living Expense Coverage:
Increased-Limit Options
Base
Coverage Option
1
Option
2
$1,500 $10,000 $15,000
Additional
Coverages
Limited Building Code Upgrade
In
most California communities, repairing or rebuilding a home
after an earthquake must be done according to current
building codes. In addition to providing funds for repairing
or replacing your home, the CEA base policy includes an
additional $10,000 in Building Code Upgrade coverage.
Option to Increase Building Code Upgrade Coverage
For
policies that renew or become effective on or after July 1,
2006, homeowners can choose to increase Building Code
Upgrade coverage by an additional $10,000, for a total
Building Code Upgrade coverage limit of $20,000.
Items Not Covered
Dwelling-Related Items
Your CEA
policy excludes some items from dwelling coverage. A partial
list of items that are not covered includes:
Detached
garages and most other structures that are not part of the
dwelling
Land damage (other than $10,000 in coverage for
land stabilization)
Swimming pools and spas
Awnings
and patio coverings
Fences, landscaping, and irrigation
systems
Antennas and satellite dishes
Patios and
decks
Walkways and driveways not needed for pedestrian
or disabled access to your home
Certain decorative or
artistic items such as mirrors, chandeliers, stained glass,
or mosaics
Personal Property
A partial list
of personal property items not covered by your CEA policy
includes:
Animals, birds, or fish
Artwork,
photographs, and ceramics
Motor vehicles (such as cars,
trucks, and motorcycles), riding lawn mowers, trailers, golf
carts, and watercraft
Glassware, crystal, porcelain, and
china
Spas and hot tubs
Your CEA policy contains
exclusions and special limits of coverage—read the entire
policy to become familiar with what is and is not covered.
If you still have questions about your CEA policy after
reading the information on our Web site, please contact your
insurance agent or your homeowners insurance company.
Coverage Sublimits
Sublimits - Dwelling Coverage
Once damage to your dwelling has exceeded your CEA policy’s
deductible, the policy covers reasonable emergency repairs
in an amount up to 5% of the insured value of the home as
part of the dwelling limit of insurance.
As part of
the dwelling limit of insurance, your CEA policy will pay up
to $10,000, including engineering costs, to replace,
rebuild, stabilize, or otherwise restore land you own that
is necessary to support your home. The policy does not
provide any other coverage for land.
If your dwelling
has one or more chimneys damaged by an earthquake, your CEA
policy includes a single sublimit of $5,000 to repair or
replace all dwelling chimneys.
Sublimits - Personal
Property Coverage
Personal Property coverage
sublimits include the following:
$1,000 for damage
to electronic data-processing equipment such as computers
and printers
$250 for money, bank notes, coins, and
medals
$300 for business property
Your CEA
policy contains exclusions and special limits of
coverage—read the entire policy to become familiar with what
is and is not covered. If you still have questions about
your CEA policy after reading the information on our Web
site, please contact your insurance agent or your homeowners
insurance company.
Deductibles
CEA
earthquake insurance is intended to protect your assets in
the event of catastrophic loss—in order to receive benefits
from your CEA earthquake coverage, your claim must exceed
set deductibles.
CEA policy deductibles are a
calculation of the share of loss for which a policyholder is
responsible—it is not an amount of money a policyholder must
have or pay before receiving money from the CEA.
Deductible for Dwelling Coverage
If your dwelling
sustains eligible earthquake damage in excess of the
deductible, you are eligible to a claim payment from the
CEA. The deductible amount is used to determine the amount
of your claim payment.
The dwelling deductible is
calculated as a percentage of the insured value of the
dwelling structure. The insured value is the amount of
coverage your insurer has specified as Coverage A: Dwelling
in your homeowners insurance policy—this amount can be found
on the declarations page of your homeowners insurance
policy.
The CEA policy offers two deductible
options: the standard base-limit deductible of 15% or a 10%
deductible option.
A CEA dwelling deductible is
either 10% or 15% of the insured value of the dwelling. This
table illustrates how to calculate a CEA dwelling
deductible, using an insured value of $100,000. (In
calculating your deductible, please use your own dwelling's
insured value, as stated on your CEA policy's declarations
page.)
Deductible Selected by the Policyholder x
Insured Value of Dwelling = Amount of Deductible
Example
1 15% x $100,000 = $15,000
Example 2 10% x $100,000 =
$10,000
Only covered damage to the dwelling counts
toward meeting the deductible. This means that, regardless
of the amount of damage to your home's contents (or
"personal property"), structural earthquake damage to your
dwelling must exceed the deductible before a CEA policy
would be available to pay any loss to the dwelling or any
loss to personal property. Certain other conditions may
apply to your loss—please read your policy carefully.
Once structural dwelling damage exceeds the deductible,
the CEA will authorize payment for the insured loss, up to
the insured value of your dwelling.
You do not have
to pay the deductible before the CEA pays for earthquake
damage to your home—the deductible is only used to calculate
the payable portion of your claim; you don't have to make
actual out-of-pocket expenditures before you receive
payments on your CEA claim.
How Deductibles Are Used to
Determine Claim Payments
(All three Examples assume
the policyholder has selected a base-limits deductible of
15%, and the policyholder's dwelling has an insured value of
$100,000. The claims below are made only for damage to the
dwelling.)
Amount of Eligible Dwelling Damage – Amount
of Deductible = Dwelling Claim Payment
Example 1 $13,500
– $15,000 = $0
Damage to the dwelling did not exceed
the deductible - the claim is not eligible for payment.
Example 2 $45,000 – $15,000 = $30,000*
Example 3
$120,000 – $15,000 = $100,000*
Eligible for payment,
but not more than the insured value of dwelling.
* Under
the CEA base-limits policy, paid dwelling claims are
eligible for up to an additional $10,000 for building code
upgrades.
Deductible for Personal Property Coverage
Damage to personal property is not covered unless
the dwelling deductible is met. If the dwelling deductible
is met, no additional deductible applies for your Personal
Property coverage.
Deductible for Additional Living
Expense/Loss of Use Coverage
There is no deductible
for Additional Living Expense/Loss of Use coverage.
Eligible Structures
CEA homeowner policies are
intended for individually-owned structures of one to four
dwelling units that are used exclusively for residential
purposes. The dwelling structure need not be owner-occupied,
and only dwelling structures in California are eligible for
coverage—buildings used for any commercial, industrial, or
business purpose are not eligible for CEA earthquake
coverage.
Structures other than the eligible
dwellings described above, including detached garages,
outbuildings and other structures, are not eligible for CEA
coverage.
Multiple Structures on One Property
The CEA will not cover more than one residential structure
on one CEA policy. If more than one dwelling is located on a
property, the secondary dwellings may be eligible for CEA
coverage if written under separate policies—talk to your
homeowners insurance agent or company for details.
Rates & Premiums
How Rates are Determined
The CEA is required by law to use the best science
available, and is expressly permitted by law to use
earthquake computer modeling, to establish actuarially sound
rates.
Identifying Seismic Risk
To determine
seismic risk for an area, scientists and engineers at the
computer modeling firm under contract to the CEA incorporate
data from a variety of highly respected sources including
the United States Geological Survey (USGS) and the
California Geological Survey. Criteria used to assess
seismic risk for CEA rating territories include location and
proximity to earthquake faults, other geological factors
that may affect how structures respond to earthquakes, and
soil type.
Computer Modeling
Computer modeling
uses scientific and engineering data and actuarial
techniques to calculate anticipated losses from earthquakes.
Taking characteristics of the CEA portfolio of
earthquake-insurance policies, an earthquake model simulates
earthquakes of varying magnitudes, in various locations
throughout California. The CEA's policy inventory is the
most comprehensive database ever developed for earthquake
ratemaking.
Modeling potential loss scenarios allows
the CEA to calculate the claim-paying capacity it must
maintain and helps determine appropriate
earthquake-insurance rates. The CEA rating methodology is
based on the best available scientific, engineering, and
actuarial expertise and has been approved and accepted by
the CEA Governing Board and the California Department of
Insurance.
Rating Territories
Based on
scientifically modeled seismic risk, the CEA has established
actuarially sound “rating territories,” grouping together
those ZIP Codes that present reasonably similar seismic
risk. Although the risk might not be exactly the same for
each ZIP Code in a rating territory, the risks are similar
enough to justify the territorial grouping. Policyholders
who live in rating territories close to an earthquake fault
or have predominantly poor soil can expect higher rates than
those on firm soil or farther from faults.
Age and Type
of Construction
Age and type of construction
contribute to how a residential structure reacts during an
earthquake. Based on the best available scientific and
engineering research, CEA premiums reflect the following
rating factors:
Houses built on a slab perform
better than those built on a raised foundation.
One-story houses are less vulnerable to earthquake shaking
than multi-story houses.
Unreinforced masonry structures
are more susceptible to damage than those of wood-frame
construction.
Houses of a certain age are not as
strongly constructed as others.
How CEA Premiums are
Calculated
Rating factors, like the location, age, and
type of construction of your home, determine your rate, but
the amount and types of CEA coverage you choose determine
your premium, the amount you pay each year for your
earthquake policy. The factors listed below help to
determine your premium.
Rating territory, determined
by the ZIP Code of the insured property
Insured value
(as stated on declarations page of the companion homeowners
insurance policy)
Construction type
Age of
construction
Number of stories
Deductible selected
(10% or 15%)
Whether or not optional Increased Building
Code coverage (available for policies effective or renewing
on or after July 1, 2006) is selected
Amount of Personal
Property coverage selected
Amount of Additional Living
Expense/Loss of Use coverage selected
Note: Dwellings
that have been retrofitted may be entitled to a 5% premium
discount.
Only a CEA participating insurance company or
its agent can give you an exact CEA-premium quote, but to
get a good estimate of the cost, use our handy premium
calculator.
Retrofit Discount
The California
Insurance Code states that CEA policyholders who have
retrofitted their homes to withstand earthquake shake damage
according to standards and to the extent set by the CEA
Governing Board receive a 5% premium discount.
The CEA applies a 5% premium discount to dwellings that meet
the following requirements: built before 1979, is of a
wood-frame construction-type, the frame is tied to the
foundation, has cripple walls braced with plywood or its
equivalent, and the water heater is secured to the building
frame. The retrofit discount is not available for houses
built on concrete-slab foundations.
Mobile home
The CEA mobile home owners policy is
designed to help get you back into your home after an
earthquake. The CEA base-limits policy for mobile home
owners includes:
Dwelling coverage - The coverage
limit is the insured value of your mobile home stated on
your companion homeowner policy.
Personal Property
coverage - $5,000
Additional Living Expense/Loss of Use
coverage - $1,500
You may select either a 10% or 15%
deductible on your Dwelling coverage, and CEA’s
increased-limit options allow you to increase Personal
Property coverage to as much as $100,000 and Additional
Living Expense/Loss of Use coverage to as much as $15,000.
Your CEA policy contains exclusions and special limits
of coverage—read the entire policy to become familiar with
what is and is not covered. If you still have questions
about your CEA policy after reading the information on our
Web site, please contact your insurance agent or your
homeowners insurance company.
Coverage
Dwelling Coverage (Coverage A)
Dwelling coverage
helps protect the investment you have made in your mobile
home. It will help pay to repair or, (up to the policy
limit) replace, an insured mobile home when structural
damage exceeds the policy deductible. You may select a 10%
or 15% deductible for your Dwelling coverage.
The
insured value of your mobile home, as stated on the
declarations page of your companion homeowners insurance
policy, determines the Dwelling-coverage limit of your CEA
earthquake policy. If your mobile home's insured value
changes in your homeowners policy, the insured value for
your earthquake coverage will change, too, and that will
affect your earthquake-policy premium.
Personal Property
Coverage (Coverage C)
Personal Property coverage
protects many items in the typical home, including
furniture, TVs, audio and video equipment, household
appliances, bedding, and clothing.
A base policy
provides up to $5,000 to replace personal property, but you
can increase your Personal Property coverage to as much as
$100,000.
Personal Property Coverage: Increased-Limit
Options
Base
Coverage Option
1 Option
2 Option
3 Option
4
$5,000 $25,000 $50,000 $75,000 $100,000
Additional Living Expense/Loss of Use Coverage
(Coverage D)
If damage from an earthquake prevents
you from living in your home, your CEA policy may pay for
necessary increases in living expenses you incur to maintain
your normal standard of living.
CEA Additional Living
Expense/Loss of Use coverage on a property you own and rent
to tenants can help protect your rental income, to the limit
of that coverage.
A base policy provides $1,500 of
Additional Living Expense coverage or you can increase that
coverage to as much as $15,000.
Additional Living
Expense Coverage: Increased-Limit Options
Base
Coverage Option
1 Option
2
$1,500 $10,000 $15,000
Additional Coverages
Limited Building Code
Upgrade
In most California communities, repairing or
rebuilding a home after an earthquake must be done according
to current building codes. In addition to providing funds
for repairing or replacing your home, the CEA base policy
includes an additional $10,000 in Building Code Upgrade
coverage.
Items Not Covered
Dwelling-Related Items
Your CEA policy excludes some items from dwelling
coverage. A partial list of items that are not covered
includes:
Detached garages and most other structures
that are not part of the dwelling
Land damage (other
than $10,000 in coverage for land stabilization)
Swimming pools and spas
Awnings and patio coverings
Fences, landscaping, and irrigation systems
Antennas and
satellite dishes
Patios and decks
Walkways and
driveways not needed for pedestrian or disabled access to
your home
Certain decorative or artistic items such as
mirrors, chandeliers, stained glass, or mosaics
Personal Property
A partial list of personal property
items not covered by your CEA policy includes:
Animals, birds, or fish
Artwork, photographs, and
ceramics
Motor vehicles (such as cars, trucks, and
motorcycles), riding lawn mowers, trailers, golf carts, and
watercraft
Glassware, crystal, porcelain, and china
Spas and hot tubs
Your CEA policy contains
exclusions and special limits of coverage—read the entire
policy to become familiar with what is and is not covered.
If you still have questions about your CEA policy after
reading the information on our Web site, please contact your
insurance agent or your homeowners insurance company.
Coverage Sublimits
Sublimits - Dwelling Coverage
Once damage to your dwelling has exceeded your CEA policy’s
deductible, the policy covers reasonable emergency repairs
in an amount up to 5% of the insured value of the home as
part of the dwelling limit of insurance.
As part of
the dwelling limit of insurance, your CEA policy will pay up
to $10,000, including engineering costs, to replace,
rebuild, stabilize, or otherwise restore land you own that
is necessary to support your home. The policy does not
provide any other coverage for land.
Sublimits -
Personal Property Coverage
Personal Property coverage
sublimits include the following:
$1,000 for damage
to electronic data-processing equipment such as computers
and printers
$250 for money, bank notes, coins, and
medals
$300 for business property
Your CEA
policy contains exclusions and special limits of
coverage—read the entire policy to become familiar with what
is and is not covered. If you still have questions about
your CEA policy after reading the information on our Web
site, please contact your insurance agent or your homeowners
insurance company.
Deductibles
CEA
earthquake insurance is intended to protect your assets in
the event of catastrophic loss—in order to receive benefits
from your CEA earthquake coverage, your claim must exceed
set deductibles.
CEA policy deductibles are a
calculation of the share of loss for which a policyholder is
responsible—it is not an amount of money a policyholder must
have or pay before receiving money from the CEA.
Deductible for Dwelling Coverage
If your dwelling
sustains eligible earthquake damage in excess of the
deductible, you are eligible to a claim payment from the
CEA. The deductible amount is used to determine the amount
of your claim payment.
The dwelling deductible is
calculated as a percentage of the insured value of the
dwelling structure. The insured value is the amount of
coverage your insurer has specified as Coverage A: Dwelling
in your homeowners insurance policy—this amount can be found
on the declarations page of your homeowners insurance
policy.
The CEA policy offers two deductible
options: the standard base-limit deductible of 15% or a 10%
deductible option.
A CEA dwelling deductible is
either 10% or 15% of the insured value of the dwelling. This
table illustrates how to calculate a CEA dwelling
deductible, using an insured value of $100,000. (In
calculating your deductible, please use your own dwelling's
insured value, as stated on your CEA policy's declarations
page.)
Deductible Selected by the Policyholder x
Insured Value of Dwelling = Amount of Deductible
Example
1 15% x $100,000 = $15,000
Example 2 10% x $100,000 =
$10,000
Only covered damage to the dwelling counts
toward meeting the deductible. This means that, regardless
of the amount of damage to your home's contents (or
"personal property"), structural earthquake damage to your
dwelling must exceed the deductible before a CEA policy
would be available to pay any loss to the dwelling or any
loss to personal property. Certain other conditions may
apply to your loss—please read your policy carefully.
Once structural dwelling damage exceeds the deductible,
the CEA will authorize payment for the insured loss, up to
the insured value of your dwelling.
You do not have
to pay the deductible before the CEA pays for earthquake
damage to your home—the deductible is only used to calculate
the payable portion of your claim; you don't have to make
actual out-of-pocket expenditures before you receive
payments on your CEA claim.
How Deductibles Are Used to
Determine Claim Payments
(All three Examples assume
the policyholder has selected a base-limits deductible of
15%, and the policyholder's dwelling has an insured value of
$100,000. The claims below are made only for damage to the
dwelling.)
Amount of Eligible Dwelling Damage – Amount
of Deductible = Dwelling Claim Payment
Example 1 $13,500
– $15,000 = $0
Damage to the dwelling did not exceed
the deductible - the claim is not eligible for payment.
Example 2 $45,000 – $15,000 = $30,000*
Example 3
$120,000 – $15,000 = $100,000*
Eligible for payment,
but not more than the insured value of dwelling.
* Under
the CEA base-limits policy, paid dwelling claims are
eligible for up to an additional $10,000 for building code
upgrades.
Deductible for Personal Property Coverage
Damage to personal property is not covered unless
the dwelling deductible is met. If the dwelling deductible
is met, no additional deductible applies for your Personal
Property coverage.
Deductible for Additional Living
Expense/Loss of Use Coverage
There is no deductible
for Additional Living Expense/Loss of Use coverage.
Rates & Premiums
How Rates are Determined
The CEA is required by law to use the best science
available, and is expressly permitted by law to use
earthquake computer modeling, to establish actuarially sound
rates.
Identifying Seismic Risk
To determine
seismic risk for an area, scientists and engineers at the
computer modeling firm under contract to the CEA incorporate
data from a variety of highly respected sources including
the United States Geological Survey (USGS) and the
California Geological Survey. Criteria used to assess
seismic risk for CEA rating territories include location and
proximity to earthquake faults, other geological factors
that may affect how structures respond to earthquakes, and
soil type.
Computer Modeling
Computer modeling
uses scientific and engineering data and actuarial
techniques to calculate anticipated losses from earthquakes.
Taking characteristics of the CEA portfolio of
earthquake-insurance policies, an earthquake model simulates
earthquakes of varying magnitudes, in various locations
throughout California. The CEA's policy inventory is the
most comprehensive database ever developed for earthquake
ratemaking.
Modeling potential loss scenarios allows
the CEA to calculate the claim-paying capacity it must
maintain and helps determine appropriate
earthquake-insurance rates. The CEA rating methodology is
based on the best available scientific, engineering, and
actuarial expertise and has been approved and accepted by
the CEA Governing Board and the California Department of
Insurance.
Rating Territories
Based on
scientifically modeled seismic risk, the CEA has established
actuarially sound “rating territories,” grouping together
those ZIP Codes that present reasonably similar seismic
risk. Although the risk might not be exactly the same for
each ZIP Code in a rating territory, the risks are similar
enough to justify the territorial grouping. Policyholders
who live in rating territories close to an earthquake fault
or have predominantly poor soil can expect higher rates than
those on firm soil or farther from faults.
How
CEA Premiums are Calculated
Rating factors, like the
location of your residence, determine your rate, but the
amount and types of CEA coverage you choose determine your
premium, the amount you pay each year for your earthquake
policy. The factors listed below help to determine your
premium.
Rating territory, determined by the ZIP
Code of the insured mobile home's location
Insured value
(as stated on declarations page of the companion homeowners
insurance policy)
Deductible selected (10% or 15%)
Amount of Personal Property coverage selected
Amount of
Additional Living Expense/Loss of Use coverage selected
Note: Mobile homes that have been retrofitted may be
entitled to a 5% premium discount.
Only a CEA
participating insurance company or its agent can give you an
exact CEA-premium quote, but to get a good estimate of the
cost, use our handy premium calculator.
What Is a
Modular Home versus a Mobile home or Manufactured Home?
Though built in sections at a factory, modular homes are
built to conform to all building codes at their
destinations. They are generally placed on a foundation,
then joined and completed by a local builder.
Mobile
homes (or manufactured homes) are built to quality-assurance
standards administered by the U.S. Department of Housing and
Urban Development, rather than to building codes at their
destinations. Mobile homes are usually built on a
non-removable steel chassis. Building inspectors check the
work done locally (such as electrical hook-up) but are not
required to approve the structure.
The CEA rates
modular homes in the same manner as site-built homes. CEA
participating insurance companies may rate a mobile home as
a dwelling if the mobile home is permanently attached to a
foundation so that property taxes are assessed.
Retrofit Discount
The California Insurance Code
states that CEA policyholders who have retrofitted their
homes to withstand earthquake shake damage according to
standards and to the extent set by the CEA Governing Board
receive a premium discount.
The CEA applies a premium
discount to mobile home policies if the mobile home is
reinforced by an earthquake-resistant bracing system that is
certified by the California Department of Housing and
Community Development.
The statewide average premium
discount is 55%, however the exact discount amount varies by
residence location.
Condominium
The CEA
condominium-owner policy (for individual condominiums,
townhouses, or other common-interest-development properties)
is designed to help get you back into your home after an
earthquake. When you buy a CEA base-limits condominium
policy, you have the choice of three coverage options which
may be purchased separately or in combination. The following
are the coverage and limit options available:
Building Property - $25,000
Personal Property - $5,000;
Additional Living Expense/Loss of Use - $1,500
Loss
Assessment - $25,000, $50,000 or $75,000
CEA’s
increased-limit options allow you to increase Personal
Property coverage to as much as $100,000 and Additional
Living Expense/Loss of Use coverage to as much as $15,000.
Your CEA policy contains exclusions and special
limits of coverage—read the entire policy to become familiar
with what is and is not covered. If you still have questions
about your CEA policy after reading the information on our
Web site, please contact your insurance agent or your
homeowners insurance company.
Coverage
Building Property Coverage (Coverage A)
When
damage exceeds the policy’s Building Property coverage
deductible of $3,750, this coverage provides up to $25,000
to repair and replace certain interior elements and
improvements and would also cover utility equipment such as
pipes and wiring for which you alone are responsible under
your homeowners association's governing documents.
The coverage does not pay to repair or replace parts of the
condominium development that are commonly-owned or are
otherwise the responsibility of your homeowners association.
Examples of covered interior elements and
improvements are built-in appliances, fixtures, and
wall-to-wall carpeting.
When you purchase earthquake
insurance for your condominium, you should confirm which
utility and similar equipment are your legal responsibility
to repair and maintain.
Personal Property Coverage
(Coverage C)
Personal Property coverage protects
many items in the typical home including such items as
furniture, TVs, audio and video equipment, household
appliances, bedding, and clothing.
If you choose
Personal Property coverage, base coverage provides up to
$5,000 to replace personal property, but you can increase
your coverage up to as much as $100,000. By choosing to
include Personal Property coverage in your policy, you will
automatically receive Additional Living Expense/Loss of Use
coverage of $1,500.
Personal Property Coverage:
Increased-Limit Options
Base
Coverage Option
1
Option
2 Option
3 Option
4
$5,000 $25,000
$50,000 $75,000 $100,000
Additional Living
Expense/Loss of Use Coverage (Coverage D)
If damage
from an earthquake prevents you from living in your home,
your CEA policy may pay for necessary increases in living
expenses you incur to maintain your normal standard of
living.
CEA Additional Living Expense/Loss of Use
coverage on a property you own and rent to tenants can help
protect your rental income, to the limit of that coverage.
You can purchase a base limit of $1,500 of Additional
Living Expense coverage or increase that coverage to as much
as $15,000. If you choose to include Additional Living
Expense coverage as part of your policy, you will
automatically receive base Personal Property coverage of
$5,000 as well.
Additional Living Expense Coverage:
Increased-Limit Options
Base
Coverage Option
1
Option
2
$1,500 $10,000 $15,000
Loss
Assessment Coverage (Coverage E)
In condominium
communities, building exteriors, certain building
components, and common areas are typically owned by the
homeowners association or by all of the condominium owners
as a group. In the event of earthquake damage to such
property, the association, in accordance with its governing
documents, may impose an assessment against members of the
association to pay for repairs. Loss Assessment coverage
will help you pay your share of certain assessments the
association may impose.
If the fair market value of
your condominium is greater than $135,000, you can purchase
$50,000 or $75,000 in Loss Assessment coverage; if the fair
market value is $135,000 or less, you can choose to purchase
either $25,000, $50,000 or $75,000 in coverage.
Additional Coverage
Limited Building Code Upgrade
Coverage
In most California communities, repairing
or rebuilding a home after an earthquake must be done
according to current building codes. In addition to the
$25,000 Building Property coverage limits, the Building
Property coverage provides an additional $10,000 in coverage
for the cost of making upgrades required by current building
codes.
Items Not Covered
Building Property and Loss
Assessment
Your policy excludes some items from your
Building Property and Loss Assessment coverage. A partial
list of items that are not covered includes:
Detached garages and most other structures that are not part
of the commonly-owned dwelling structures
Land damage
(other than $10,000 in coverage for land stabilization)
Swimming pools and spas
Awnings and patio coverings
Fences, landscaping, and irrigation systems
Antennas and
satellite dishes
Decorative features
Personal
Property
A partial list of personal property items
not covered by your CEA policy includes:
Animals,
birds, or fish
Artwork, photographs, and ceramics
Motor vehicles (such as cars, trucks, and motorcycles),
riding lawn mowers, trailers, golf carts, and watercraft
Glassware, crystal, porcelain, and china
Spas and hot
tubs
Your CEA policy contains exclusions and special
limits of coverage—read the entire policy to become familiar
with what is and is not covered. If you still have questions
about your CEA policy after reading the information on our
Web site, please contact your insurance agent or your
homeowners insurance company.
Coverage Sublimits
Sublimits - Personal Property Coverage
Personal
Property coverage sublimits include the following:
$1,000 for damage to electronic data-processing equipment
such as computers and printers
$250 for money, bank
notes, coins, and medals
$300 for business property
Your CEA policy contains exclusions and special limits
of coverage—read the entire policy to become familiar with
what is and is not covered. If you still have questions
about your CEA policy after reading the information on our
Web site, please contact your insurance agent or your
homeowners insurance company.
Deductibles
CEA earthquake insurance is intended to protect your assets
in the event of catastrophic loss—in order to receive
benefits from your CEA earthquake coverage, your claim must
exceed set deductibles.
CEA policy deductibles are a
calculation of the share of loss for which a policyholder is
responsible—it is not an amount of money a policyholder must
have or pay before receiving money from the CEA.
Deductible for Building Property Coverage
Building
Property coverage provides up to $25,000 to repair or
replace interior structural components when damage exceeds
the policy’s $3,750 (15%) deductible.
Deductible for
Personal Property Coverage
The deductible is $750,
no matter what limit of Personal Property coverage you
select.
Deductible for Additional Living Expense/Loss of
Use Coverage
There is no deductible for Additional
Living Expense/Loss of Use coverage.
Deductible for Loss
Assessment Coverage
Loss Assessment coverage has a
deductible of 15% of the total Loss Assessment coverage
amount.
Rates & Premiums
How Rates are
Determined
The CEA is required by law to use the
best science available, and is expressly permitted by law to
use earthquake computer modeling, to establish actuarially
sound rates.
Identifying Seismic Risk
To
determine seismic risk for an area, scientists and engineers
at the computer modeling firm under contract to the CEA
incorporate data from a variety of highly respected sources
including the United States Geological Survey (USGS) and the
California Geological Survey. Criteria used to assess
seismic risk for CEA rating territories include location and
proximity to earthquake faults, other geological factors
that may affect how structures respond to earthquakes, and
soil type.
Computer Modeling
Computer modeling
uses scientific and engineering data and actuarial
techniques to calculate anticipated losses from earthquakes.
Taking characteristics of the CEA portfolio of
earthquake-insurance policies, an earthquake model simulates
earthquakes of varying magnitudes, in various locations
throughout California. The CEA's policy inventory is the
most comprehensive database ever developed for earthquake
ratemaking.
Modeling potential loss scenarios allows
the CEA to calculate the claim-paying capacity it must
maintain and helps determine appropriate
earthquake-insurance rates. The CEA rating methodology is
based on the best available scientific, engineering, and
actuarial expertise and has been approved and accepted by
the CEA Governing Board and the California Department of
Insurance.
Rating Territories
Based on
scientifically modeled seismic risk, the CEA has established
actuarially sound “rating territories,” grouping together
those ZIP Codes that present reasonably similar seismic
risk. Although the risk might not be exactly the same for
each ZIP Code in a rating territory, the risks are similar
enough to justify the territorial grouping. Policyholders
who live in rating territories close to an earthquake fault
or have predominantly poor soil can expect higher rates than
those on firm soil or farther from faults.
How
CEA Premiums are Calculated
Rating factors, like the
location of your residence, determine your rate, but the
amount and types of CEA coverage you choose determine your
premium, the amount you pay each year for your earthquake
policy. The factors listed below help to determine your
premium.
Rating territory, determined by the ZIP
Code of the insured property
Fair market value of the
individual unit
Whether or not an HOA master policy of
earthquake insurance exists
Whether or not Building
Property coverage is selected
Amount of Personal
Property coverage selected
Amount of Additional Living
Expense/Loss of Use coverage selected
Amount of Loss
Assessment coverage available or selected
Only a CEA
participating insurance company or its agent can give you an
exact CEA-premium quote, but to get a good estimate of the
cost, use our handy premium calculator.
Has Your
Homeowners Association Purchased a Master Policy for
Earthquake?
A master policy of earthquake insurance,
purchased by a condominium owner’s homeowners association
(HOA), may provide condominium owners with a significant
layer of protection from earthquake damage and loss. (Such
policies are considered commercial policies and are not
available through the CEA.) It is important for you to know
if your HOA has a master policy of earthquake insurance in
place and, if it does, to become familiar with its scope of
coverage, exclusions, and deductibles.
If your
condominium development suffers earthquake damage but your
HOA has no earthquake coverage, individual condominium
owners might have to pay assessments levied by the HOA to
repair or rebuild condominium structures. If an HOA master
earthquake policy is in place, it still may have deductibles
for which owners of individual units can be assessed. But
because of the protection a master policy provides, your CEA
earthquake-insurance premium will be lower if you provide
documentation that your HOA has a master policy of
earthquake insurance in force.
Retrofit Discount
Condominium owners and renters are not eligible for the
CEA retrofit discount.
Does My
Homeowners Policy Cover Earthquakes?
Most standard
homeowners, mobile home owners, condominium, and renters
insurance policies do not cover earthquake damage. Similar
to flood insurance, earthquake insurance usually must be
purchased separately.
Is My Residential Property
Insurance Company Required to Offer Earthquake Insurance?
The law requires insurers that sell residential property
insurance in California to offer earthquake coverage to
their policyholders. Residential property insurance includes
coverage for homeowners, condominium owners, mobile home
owners, and renters. In offering earthquake coverage,
insurance companies can become a CEA participating insurance
company and offer the CEA’s residential earthquake policies
or they can manage the risk themselves. To date, companies
that sell over two-thirds of the residential property
insurance in the state have opted to become CEA
participating companies.
Do I Need Earthquake Insurance?
Many people assume their residential insurance
policy fully protects them, but if you look at a typical
policy, you will see it does not cover earthquake loss. And
government disaster-relief programs are extremely
limited—they are designed to help you get partly back on
your feet, but not to replace your home and everything you
lose. So if an earthquake strikes tomorrow, will you have
the financial resources to pay for earthquake damage to your
home and its contents?
When you consider your
resources, ask yourself how much of your investment in your
home you are willing to put at risk. For many California
homeowners, their home is their biggest financial asset.
Without earthquake insurance, how do you plan to protect
that asset from the costs of earthquake damage? If you have
a typical home loan and deed of trust, did you know you
remain responsible for the loan balance even if your home is
damaged or destroyed by an earthquake?
Consider
taking these basic steps as part of good planning and
preparation: Research the earthquake hazard in your area.
Secure the contents of your home to reduce the likelihood of
damage and injury. Investigate how well your dwelling is
designed and constructed to resist damage from earthquake
motion—retrofit the structure if necessary. Analyze your
finances and develop a financial-recovery plan in case an
earthquake damages or destroys your home or its contents.
There is good information available to help you. But
only you can decide if earthquake insurance is right for
you.
What is Meant by a “Mini-policy”?
In
1996, by act of the California Legislature, a
reduced-coverage, catastrophic earthquake-insurance policy
became available. This so-called earthquake "mini-policy" is
intended to protect a policyholder’s dwelling—to provide a
"roof over your head"—while excluding coverage for costly
non-essential items such as swimming pools, patios, and
detached structures. The base CEA policy is based on and
authorized under the mini-policy law. Such policies are
intended to help the policyholder avoid catastrophic loss
while keeping premiums more affordable for more consumers.
What Are My Earthquake Risks?
No part of
California is "immune" from earthquakes—in other words,
there is no “low-risk” area in California for
Earthquakes—there are only areas of lower or higher risk.
In general terms, your home’s risk level depends on
where you live in relation to earthquake faults, the age and
type of dwelling you live in, and the soil types where you
live.
Some parts of California that have not
experienced earthquakes for 200 years or more might be more
susceptible to earthquakes than areas that have experienced
recent earthquakes. Why? Earthquake faults build up tension
over long periods of time; what we experience as an
earthquake occurs when that tension is suddenly released. It
is theorized that relatively recent earthquake activity
means that faults have released built-up tension—a lack of
earthquake activity can mean that tension is still building
and could be released at any time as an earthquake.
How
Much Earthquake Insurance Should I Have?
Like the
basic question of whether earthquake insurance is right for
you, how much coverage is right for you depends on your
individual circumstances. The following questions may help
you decide:
Can you afford to replace your household
possessions (such as sofas, beds, TVs, furniture,
refrigerators, and clothing) if they were destroyed in an
earthquake? How much would they cost?
If you have to
find temporary accommodations because you cannot live in
your home as the result of an earthquake, how much will you
need to pay for those additional living expenses?
If you
own your home, how much home equity do you have? Can you
afford to risk losing that equity if an earthquake damages
or destroys the home?
How much would it cost to rebuild
your home? Do you have assets available to repair or even
rebuild your home after an earthquake?
Do you have a
mortgage, second mortgage, or line of credit on your home?
Can you afford to continue repaying those loans while also
paying to rebuild or replace your home?
Keep in mind
that the insured value of your dwelling for your earthquake
policy is the same as the amount of coverage specified in
your homeowners insurance policy. If you are underinsured on
your homeowners policy, you are underinsured on your
earthquake policy, too.
Won’t the Government Be There
to Help Me?
The federal Department of Homeland
Security’s Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and
the Governor’s Office of Emergency Services (OES) in
California respond to, plan for, and help mitigate effects
of disasters. Government disaster-relief programs are
designed to help you get partly back on your feet but not to
replace your home and everything you lose.
The
primary form of federal disaster relief is the low-interest
loan—as a loan, it must be repaid. Because it is a loan that
must be repaid, some people do not qualify for the loan.
FEMA grants for post-disaster emergency home repairs and
temporary rent assistance are only available to individuals
and households who do not qualify for loans.
In
addition to creating a plan to take care of your family for
immediately after an earthquake, you should also develop a
family plan for long-term financial recovery.
How Can I
Purchase CEA Earthquake Insurance?
CEA earthquake
insurance policies are sold only through CEA participating
insurance companies. You can buy CEA coverage only through
the insurance company that provides your residential
property insurance and only if that company is a CEA
participating insurance company. Participating insurance
companies process all CEA policy applications, policy
renewals, invoices, and payments and handle all CEA claims.
To establish a new CEA policy, to make changes to an
existing CEA policy, to ask questions about your CEA
coverage, or to request a copy of your CEA policy, please
contact your insurance agent or participating insurance
company. To obtain CEA coverage, you must first have a
companion residential insurance policy written through a CEA
participating insurance company.
GET A QUOTE: Call (310) 860-5000