Check the Details Before You Accept a Panhandle Claim Settlement Offer
by Charles R. Tutwiler on 5/26/2014
Hopefully, property owners the in Pensacola, Destin, Gulf Breeze and the Ft. Walton Beach areas who were impacted by the flood and water damage are starting to receive settlement offers from their insurance company about their claims. Sometimes our firm will be retained by a homeowner only to receive a call several weeks later to say the insurance company adjuster had called them with a verbal settlement offer they might be able to live with. Even though it’s outside of our contract cancellation date and work may have begun on the loss, we typically wished them well and thanked them for their consideration in selecting our firm to assist them. That got me thinking about all the property insurance claim offers we’ve gotten over the many years assisting clients.
As a public adjuster, I remembered a lesson I learned many years ago about verbal settlement offers. Insurance company adjusters are trained to measure and price a loss. While this process is highly subjective and subject to a lot of negotiations on a lot of different factors, the offer may not in fact be what you will get in the form of a check. What has to be factored into any property insurance claim is the policy terms and conditions. While a good reputable insurance company adjuster will disclose these policy provisions to you with the offer, others will not just so they can get you to agree and perhaps sign a proof of loss or even worse a full release.
So before accepting an offer, ask if it is net of all policy terms and conditions. Ask about depreciation, co-insurance issues that may be applied to penalize you for being under insured, and the deductible issues.
Even if these policy terms and conditions are applicable, they may be subject to different interpretations and negotiations. As an example, does the deductible come off the loss or the covered loss? If a co-insurance penalty is being applied, can accepting an actual cash value settlement (and thus having the co-insurance figured on the actual cash value of the property) reduce its effect? And remember that depreciation amounts are very subjective and negotiable.
Just remember before you accept that claim settlement offer, make sure you know the details of how the insurance company adjuster arrived at his/her figures. Ask that any offer made to you verbally be put in writing, so you can read and understand how the numbers were calculated.
If you have questions regarding any property insurance related issues please call 800.321.4488 or contact us to submit a question to one of our public adjuster claim experts. #PensacolaFlooding #DestinFlooding #FtWaltonFlooding #GulfBreezeFlooding
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