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Water Damage and Claims from Home and Household Insurance

On Insurance Chat we discuss the response to damage from flooding in several posts. The South African Insurance Association has offered some guidance in a post titled “Statement by the SA Insurance Association on flooding and weather damage”. We also discuss insurance claims for this damage in a post titled “What is Household insurance and does it cover water and flood damage?”

It does however not take a natural disaster or flooding from an external source such as a burst main on your road or overflowing river to cause significant water damage! Most water damage is usually very gradual and remains undetected until the last moment when, suddenly, out of the blue, a wall collapses or a pipe or geyser bursts damaging a host of other household goods and property.

Water Damage and the Home and Household Insurance Policy

Water damage is regarded as the most common cause of property and household insurance claims. Not surprisingly, it is also the area in which most claims for damages are rejected by insurers.

Many homeowners confuse damage arising gradually over time from poor maintenance with once-off and unforeseen catastrophic events like exceptional storms or freak floods.

We always need to refer to the most important question – what is the fine print in your insurance policy and what does YOUR policy say about insurance cover? Insurance is not a “one size fits all”. Insurance is very much an individualised product whereby you as the policyholder are covered for what you have bought.

It is your responsibility to find out whether the water damage was caused by a covered peril such as a storm or flood. If you don’t know what water damage is covered, review your home insurance policy or check with your insurance company now, before any damage occurs.

Your insurer may cover the cost of locating, accessing and repairing the leak, as well as the cost of any water damage restoration. However, ‘trace and access’ cover or ‘Home Emergency’ cover isn’t always offered as standard, so you may want to check if your policy includes these. If you have contents insurance, the policy should cover the cost of replacing contents that was damaged by the water.

‘Accidental damage’ may also be covered for accidents such as over-flowing baths or accidentally drilling into pipes too.

Duty of Care and Maintenance by the Homeowner

It is important to recognize that the insured homeowners not only has rights, but also obligations under the insurance contract.

From an insurance perspective, “the onus falls on homeowners to regularly maintain their homes, checking for leakages or accumulating water so that if water-related damage occurs it cannot be attributed to lack of maintenance and can be genuinely classed as unforeseen”.

Most policies will exclude any damage that is caused by not properly maintaining your property or by preventable damage such as a slow, gradual leak. The best way to avoid this is by keeping your pipes properly maintained all year round, fixing any leaks you discover immediately, and by protecting your property against frozen pipes in cold weather.

Preventative Measures to Curb Water Damage

Maintain the Structural Integrity of the Home

Maintaining Pipes and Checking for Leaks

The best ways to maintain your pipes all year-round are:

When you are away from Home

When there is Municipal Repairs and Water Interruption

When water damage has occurred

It is important that you should immediately report any water damage to your insurer – either directly or via your broker.

Also view:

Statement by the SA Insurance Association on flooding and weather damage

What is Household insurance and does it cover water and flood damage?

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