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[email protected] December 15th 05 04:01 PM

Insuring a vacant house
 
I'm in the process of moving across the country, am selling my present
home. Called my insurance agent today (Farmer's) to tell him of the
move, thinking some adjustment to the home owner's policy would be
required (on the one hand the house is vacant, so presumably more
vulnerable, on the other it's empty, so no content is there to be
harmed) he told me they will not insure an empty house & as far as he
knows no one will. I almost wish I had not mentioned it, but you can
be sure if I hadn't & the damn place had burned down, they wouldn't
have paid anyway if they found out it was vacant. Anyway, anyone have
any advice on insuring an empty house while it is on the market?

TIA

Rick


Toller December 15th 05 04:06 PM

Insuring a vacant house
 

wrote in message
oups.com...
I'm in the process of moving across the country, am selling my present
home. Called my insurance agent today (Farmer's) to tell him of the
move, thinking some adjustment to the home owner's policy would be
required (on the one hand the house is vacant, so presumably more
vulnerable, on the other it's empty, so no content is there to be
harmed) he told me they will not insure an empty house & as far as he
knows no one will. I almost wish I had not mentioned it, but you can
be sure if I hadn't & the damn place had burned down, they wouldn't
have paid anyway if they found out it was vacant. Anyway, anyone have
any advice on insuring an empty house while it is on the market?

My cottage is empty 9 months a year, and much of the other 3 months as well.
Insurance company never said anything about it; the rates are pretty normal.

Try another company.
It is certainly best that you mentioned it; if there is a clause in your
policy about it, they would just deny the claim.



Pop December 15th 05 04:37 PM

Insuring a vacant house
 
wrote in message
oups.com...
: I'm in the process of moving across the country, am selling my
present
: home. Called my insurance agent today (Farmer's) to tell him
of the
: move, thinking some adjustment to the home owner's policy would
be
: required (on the one hand the house is vacant, so presumably
more
: vulnerable, on the other it's empty, so no content is there to
be
: harmed) he told me they will not insure an empty house & as far
as he
: knows no one will. I almost wish I had not mentioned it, but
you can
: be sure if I hadn't & the damn place had burned down, they
wouldn't
: have paid anyway if they found out it was vacant. Anyway,
anyone have
: any advice on insuring an empty house while it is on the
market?
:
: TIA
:
: Rick
:

Not recent, but a few years ago my agent told me they would only
insure it against fire/theft if it was temporarily unoccupied. No
contents, hail, roof claims, etc etc; so it was minimal, but it
was insurance. Maybe he thought you were abandoning it? Are
taxes in arrears? Don't answer that; just being rhetorical.

I'd ask around; that doesn't sound right.

Pop



louie December 15th 05 05:09 PM

Insuring a vacant house
 
I recently moved and it took about 3 months to sell the property. My
local agent was much more understanding and suggested, hypothetically,
that IF a person were to move and leave the property unattended, the
insurance company would drop the coverage, and the mortgage company
could then possibly call the mortgage due at that point. Her advice
was something along the lines of "no need to tell them about it until
you have closed on the property sale, just forward your mail"


Joseph Meehan December 15th 05 05:27 PM

Insuring a vacant house
 
wrote:
I'm in the process of moving across the country, am selling my present
home. Called my insurance agent today (Farmer's) to tell him of the
move, thinking some adjustment to the home owner's policy would be
required (on the one hand the house is vacant, so presumably more
vulnerable, on the other it's empty, so no content is there to be
harmed) he told me they will not insure an empty house & as far as he
knows no one will. I almost wish I had not mentioned it, but you can
be sure if I hadn't & the damn place had burned down, they wouldn't
have paid anyway if they found out it was vacant. Anyway, anyone have
any advice on insuring an empty house while it is on the market?

TIA

Rick


Check around at other companies and or agents. I suspect anything is
insurable (for a price). It is difficult for anyone to tell you without
knowing what state you are in as the rules are different in different
states.

--
Joseph Meehan

Dia duit



Joshua Putnam December 15th 05 06:20 PM

Insuring a vacant house
 
In article .com,
says...
I'm in the process of moving across the country, am selling my present
home. Called my insurance agent today (Farmer's) to tell him of the
move, thinking some adjustment to the home owner's policy would be
required (on the one hand the house is vacant, so presumably more
vulnerable, on the other it's empty, so no content is there to be
harmed) he told me they will not insure an empty house & as far as he
knows no one will.


Much depends on the state the house is in, since insurance is
regulated at the state level.

I'm only really familiar with Washington State, since that's where I
live and have my insurance license. In Washington, Farmers agents
can insure a vacant house through Foremost Insurance, which is owned
by Farmers. It has a variety of "specialty" policies for houses that
don't meet the standards for normal homeowners policies. But I know
there are states where Foremost does not offer those plans, so you
might be in one of them.

You might also call your agent back and ask what, exactly, the
company would do if your house is vacant. They already have it
insured, is vacancy grounds for a mid-term cancellation of your
policy, or would they temporarily reduce coverage while vacant, then
decline to renew the policy when the current term expires? How long
do you expect to own a vacant house?

You might try going to
www.netquote.com and putting in the info on
your house -- it will be forwarded to multiple insurance agents
serving your zip code, so it's a lot faster than calling around local
agents to explain everything again.

Disclaimer: Unless you see my name on your Policy Declaration Pages,
I am not your insurnce agent and this is not specific advice about
any particular policy, house, or situation. Contact your own
insurance agent for specifics of your policy.

--
is Joshua Putnam
http://www.phred.org/~josh/
Updated Bicycle Touring Books List:
http://www.phred.org/~josh/bike/tourbooks.html

yourname December 15th 05 06:40 PM

Insuring a vacant house
 
Joshua Putnam wrote:
In article .com,
says...

I'm in the process of moving across the country, am selling my present
home. Called my insurance agent today (Farmer's) to tell him of the
move, thinking some adjustment to the home owner's policy would be
required (on the one hand the house is vacant, so presumably more
vulnerable, on the other it's empty, so no content is there to be
harmed) he told me they will not insure an empty house & as far as he
knows no one will.



Much depends on the state the house is in, since insurance is
regulated at the state level.

I'm only really familiar with Washington State, since that's where I
live and have my insurance license. In Washington, Farmers agents
can insure a vacant house through Foremost Insurance, which is owned
by Farmers. It has a variety of "specialty" policies for houses that
don't meet the standards for normal homeowners policies. But I know
there are states where Foremost does not offer those plans, so you
might be in one of them.

You might also call your agent back and ask what, exactly, the
company would do if your house is vacant. They already have it
insured, is vacancy grounds for a mid-term cancellation of your
policy, or would they temporarily reduce coverage while vacant, then
decline to renew the policy when the current term expires? How long
do you expect to own a vacant house?

You might try going to
www.netquote.com and putting in the info on
your house -- it will be forwarded to multiple insurance agents
serving your zip code, so it's a lot faster than calling around local
agents to explain everything again.

Disclaimer: Unless you see my name on your Policy Declaration Pages,
I am not your insurnce agent and this is not specific advice about
any particular policy, house, or situation. Contact your own
insurance agent for specifics of your policy.

DO you have a trusted friend in need of a roof?


The term 'housesitting' exists for a reason. Just a thought

Goedjn December 15th 05 07:19 PM

Insuring a vacant house
 


Not recent, but a few years ago my agent told me they would only
insure it against fire/theft if it was temporarily unoccupied. No
contents, hail, roof claims, etc etc; so it was minimal, but it
was insurance. Maybe he thought you were abandoning it? Are
taxes in arrears? Don't answer that; just being rhetorical.

I'd ask around; that doesn't sound right.



I believe that "vacant" and "unnoccupied" are terms-of-art,
the former meaning you've left and don't plan on coming back,
and the latter meaning that you do plan on coming back.

If you don't have any luck with an independant insurance
agent, try looking at commercial policies. Are you
looking for asset-protection or liability coverage? A regular
umbrella policy should cover the latter.



[email protected] December 15th 05 07:24 PM

Insuring a vacant house
 
Thanks for the helpful replies. House is in Ohio, will be totally
empty, save some appliances. Unfortunately I can't even check on it,
since we're moving to WA state. I have one rather knuckle-headed
neighbor who's marginally reliable, I'm going to ask him to keep an eye
open, but who knows? I'll check out the netquote.com site, also I
think I'll try calling Farmer's directly; although I've used this agent
for about 20 years for house & car insurance, he could be mistaken, or
as someone suggested on another forum, doesn't want to bother
re-writing the policy if he doesn't get anything out of it. That would
be too bad, but not a huge shock. BTW the house is paid for, so a
mortgage is not an issue. This situation must come up literally
millions of times a year in the US, I can't imagine there's no way of
accommodating it. Needless to say, I'd like to see the place sell
about an hour after I vacate, but that's not terribly likely...

Rick


Bob December 15th 05 07:44 PM

Insuring a vacant house
 

wrote in message oups.com...
I'm in the process of moving across the country, am selling my present
home. Called my insurance agent today (Farmer's) to tell him of the
move, thinking some adjustment to the home owner's policy would be
required (on the one hand the house is vacant, so presumably more
vulnerable, on the other it's empty, so no content is there to be
harmed) he told me they will not insure an empty house & as far as he
knows no one will. I almost wish I had not mentioned it, but you can
be sure if I hadn't & the damn place had burned down, they wouldn't
have paid anyway if they found out it was vacant. Anyway, anyone have
any advice on insuring an empty house while it is on the market?


My neighbor re-insured her currently vacant and in-remodel rental as a
"vacation home" after being told the insurer would not pay if it was damaged
while vacant when considered a rental.

Bob


Jim McLaughlin December 15th 05 08:39 PM

Insuring a vacant house
 
Go through the local yellow pages and find an independent commercial
insurance broker. You'll get covrage. It will be costly.

Farmers' agents are company employees and are in the business of
representing Farmers' and never the policyholder.

Same goes for All Snake and Snak Farm and Nationwide.

--
Jim McLaughlin

Reply address is deliberately munged.
If you really need to reply directly, try:
jimdotmclaughlinatcomcastdotcom

And you know it is a dotnet not a dotcom
address.
wrote in message
oups.com...
I'm in the process of moving across the country, am selling my present
home. Called my insurance agent today (Farmer's) to tell him of the
move, thinking some adjustment to the home owner's policy would be
required (on the one hand the house is vacant, so presumably more
vulnerable, on the other it's empty, so no content is there to be
harmed) he told me they will not insure an empty house & as far as he
knows no one will. I almost wish I had not mentioned it, but you can
be sure if I hadn't & the damn place had burned down, they wouldn't
have paid anyway if they found out it was vacant. Anyway, anyone have
any advice on insuring an empty house while it is on the market?

TIA

Rick




Kitep December 15th 05 08:55 PM

Insuring a vacant house
 
I just bought a house that I plan to rehab then resell and it will be vacant
for a while. When I called my insurance (State Farm) they said they don't
insure vacant houses. Other places do, such as Nationwide or Norris &
Assoc. Prepare for sticker shock, as it runs about $1200/yr for vacant vs
$250/yr for occupied. I found a friend who is willing to house-sit for me
so I get the cheaper rate, but it sounds like that won't work in your
situation. This is in Ohio, btw.

Bottom line: the house can be insured, just keep calling places until you
find someone who will do it.


wrote in message
oups.com...
I'm in the process of moving across the country, am selling my present
home. Called my insurance agent today (Farmer's) to tell him of the
move, thinking some adjustment to the home owner's policy would be
required (on the one hand the house is vacant, so presumably more
vulnerable, on the other it's empty, so no content is there to be
harmed) he told me they will not insure an empty house & as far as he
knows no one will. I almost wish I had not mentioned it, but you can
be sure if I hadn't & the damn place had burned down, they wouldn't
have paid anyway if they found out it was vacant. Anyway, anyone have
any advice on insuring an empty house while it is on the market?




[email protected] December 15th 05 09:07 PM

Insuring a vacant house
 
On 15 Dec 2005 08:01:16 -0800, wrote:

I'm in the process of moving across the country, am selling my present
home. Called my insurance agent today (Farmer's) to tell him of the
move, thinking some adjustment to the home owner's policy would be
required (on the one hand the house is vacant, so presumably more
vulnerable, on the other it's empty, so no content is there to be
harmed) he told me they will not insure an empty house & as far as he
knows no one will. I almost wish I had not mentioned it, but you can
be sure if I hadn't & the damn place had burned down, they wouldn't
have paid anyway if they found out it was vacant. Anyway, anyone have
any advice on insuring an empty house while it is on the market?

TIA

Rick


Yoe dood.....
Give yo keys to da ganger bangers in da hood. Dis be a fukkin good
drug n partee pad fo us to have sum fun. I be da man to bee sure yo
house is safe an no doods fuk wid it. Yo gots yoself a deal bro.

Marco


[email protected] December 15th 05 09:22 PM

Insuring a vacant house
 
On Thu, 15 Dec 2005 16:06:41 GMT, "Toller" wrote:


wrote in message
roups.com...
I'm in the process of moving across the country, am selling my present
home. Called my insurance agent today (Farmer's) to tell him of the
move, thinking some adjustment to the home owner's policy would be
required (on the one hand the house is vacant, so presumably more
vulnerable, on the other it's empty, so no content is there to be
harmed) he told me they will not insure an empty house & as far as he
knows no one will. I almost wish I had not mentioned it, but you can
be sure if I hadn't & the damn place had burned down, they wouldn't
have paid anyway if they found out it was vacant. Anyway, anyone have
any advice on insuring an empty house while it is on the market?

My cottage is empty 9 months a year, and much of the other 3 months as well.
Insurance company never said anything about it; the rates are pretty normal.

Try another company.
It is certainly best that you mentioned it; if there is a clause in your
policy about it, they would just deny the claim.


America used to be a free country until all the insurance companies
took over our lives. Any freedoms that remained were given to the
republican party to destroy.

Hpw many years habve you had this sleazy company? I bet you paid them
lots of money too, and got little back. I'm not sure what you can do
now, but once you are moved, be sure to pay back the favor and tell
Farmers Insurance that you bought your insurance elsewhere for your
new home. Also ne sure to notify everyone on the internet how this
company ****ed you in the ass. Aftrer reading this, I will be sure to
never get insurance from Farmers Ins.

Bob G. December 15th 05 10:35 PM

Insuring a vacant house
 
On 15 Dec 2005 08:01:16 -0800, wrote:

I'm in the process of moving across the country, am selling my present
home. Called my insurance agent today (Farmer's) to tell him of the
move, thinking some adjustment to the home owner's policy would be
required (on the one hand the house is vacant, so presumably more
vulnerable, on the other it's empty, so no content is there to be
harmed) he told me they will not insure an empty house & as far as he
knows no one will. I almost wish I had not mentioned it, but you can
be sure if I hadn't & the damn place had burned down, they wouldn't
have paid anyway if they found out it was vacant. Anyway, anyone have
any advice on insuring an empty house while it is on the market?

TIA

Rick


==========
Ran into the same problem when my Father passed away... they would no
longer insure the vacant house .... Solved the problem by giving the
key to a niece (adult, married, trustworthy, etc)... and charging her
rent ( like a buck) ...

Honest that is all the insurance company required...for the house to
be ...considered "occupied"... ???? BTW she never stayed in the
house... But did live within 10 minutes of it...

Bob G.

HeatMan December 15th 05 11:02 PM

Insuring a vacant house
 

wrote in message
oups.com...
I'm in the process of moving across the country, am selling my present
home. Called my insurance agent today (Farmer's) to tell him of the
move, thinking some adjustment to the home owner's policy would be
required (on the one hand the house is vacant, so presumably more
vulnerable, on the other it's empty, so no content is there to be
harmed) he told me they will not insure an empty house & as far as he
knows no one will. I almost wish I had not mentioned it, but you can
be sure if I hadn't & the damn place had burned down, they wouldn't
have paid anyway if they found out it was vacant. Anyway, anyone have
any advice on insuring an empty house while it is on the market?


FWIW, don't empty it. Go to Goodwill and buy some old useless furniture and
put it in there. Leave the power on and put some lights on timers. Have
the neighbors park their cars in the driveway occasionly.

No one will insure an empty house.




HeatMan December 15th 05 11:12 PM

Insuring a vacant house
 

wrote in message
...
On Thu, 15 Dec 2005 16:06:41 GMT, "Toller" wrote:


wrote in message
roups.com...
I'm in the process of moving across the country, am selling my present
home. Called my insurance agent today (Farmer's) to tell him of the
move, thinking some adjustment to the home owner's policy would be
required (on the one hand the house is vacant, so presumably more
vulnerable, on the other it's empty, so no content is there to be
harmed) he told me they will not insure an empty house & as far as he
knows no one will. I almost wish I had not mentioned it, but you can
be sure if I hadn't & the damn place had burned down, they wouldn't
have paid anyway if they found out it was vacant. Anyway, anyone have
any advice on insuring an empty house while it is on the market?

My cottage is empty 9 months a year, and much of the other 3 months as

well.
Insurance company never said anything about it; the rates are pretty

normal.

Try another company.
It is certainly best that you mentioned it; if there is a clause in your
policy about it, they would just deny the claim.


America used to be a free country until all the insurance companies
took over our lives. Any freedoms that remained were given to the
republican party to destroy.


Not quite. It's not the political parties fault. It may the the fault of
capitalism...

Hpw many years habve you had this sleazy company? I bet you paid them
lots of money too, and got little back. I'm not sure what you can do
now, but once you are moved, be sure to pay back the favor and tell
Farmers Insurance that you bought your insurance elsewhere for your
new home. Also ne sure to notify everyone on the internet how this
company ****ed you in the ass. Aftrer reading this, I will be sure to
never get insurance from Farmers Ins.


You gotta look at the track record of vacant houses. It sits vacant for a
week with no lights, no movement, etc, someone's going to take notice.
Vandalism, who knows? Someone moved into a vacant house in my former
neighborhood and set up house. "We bought it" was their answer when asked.
When the sheriff showed up to evict them, they claimed squatter rights after
8 months. Nope.

The insurance company is out there to make a profit for themselves and their
shareholders.




Oscar_Lives December 15th 05 11:58 PM

Insuring a vacant house
 

"louie" wrote in message
oups.com...
I recently moved and it took about 3 months to sell the property. My
local agent was much more understanding and suggested, hypothetically,
that IF a person were to move and leave the property unattended, the
insurance company would drop the coverage, and the mortgage company
could then possibly call the mortgage due at that point. Her advice
was something along the lines of "no need to tell them about it until
you have closed on the property sale, just forward your mail"


Yeah, just try to collect on a claim when it burns! HA HA HA!!!

Liers get what they deserve.



Robertm December 16th 05 12:12 AM

Insuring a vacant house
 

wrote in message
...
On Thu, 15 Dec 2005 16:06:41 GMT, "Toller" wrote:


wrote in message
groups.com...
I'm in the process of moving across the country, am selling my present
home. Called my insurance agent today (Farmer's) to tell him of the
move, thinking some adjustment to the home owner's policy would be
required (on the one hand the house is vacant, so presumably more
vulnerable, on the other it's empty, so no content is there to be
harmed) he told me they will not insure an empty house & as far as he
knows no one will. I almost wish I had not mentioned it, but you can
be sure if I hadn't & the damn place had burned down, they wouldn't
have paid anyway if they found out it was vacant. Anyway, anyone have
any advice on insuring an empty house while it is on the market?

My cottage is empty 9 months a year, and much of the other 3 months as
well.
Insurance company never said anything about it; the rates are pretty
normal.

Try another company.
It is certainly best that you mentioned it; if there is a clause in your
policy about it, they would just deny the claim.


America used to be a free country until all the insurance companies
took over our lives. Any freedoms that remained were given to the
republican party to destroy.

Hpw many years habve you had this sleazy company? I bet you paid them
lots of money too, and got little back. I'm not sure what you can do
now, but once you are moved, be sure to pay back the favor and tell
Farmers Insurance that you bought your insurance elsewhere for your
new home. Also ne sure to notify everyone on the internet how this
company ****ed you in the ass. Aftrer reading this, I will be sure to
never get insurance from Farmers Ins.


This is a pretty much standard policy with most insurance companies. I got
around it by buying insurance for "vacant house under construction". Problem
with those policies is that you must prepay for the year and there is no
refund if you cancel three months down the road.

Bob



[email protected] December 16th 05 01:28 AM

Insuring a vacant house
 
On Thu, 15 Dec 2005 18:02:47 -0500, "HeatMan"
wrote:


wrote in message
roups.com...
I'm in the process of moving across the country, am selling my present
home. Called my insurance agent today (Farmer's) to tell him of the
move, thinking some adjustment to the home owner's policy would be
required (on the one hand the house is vacant, so presumably more
vulnerable, on the other it's empty, so no content is there to be
harmed) he told me they will not insure an empty house & as far as he
knows no one will. I almost wish I had not mentioned it, but you can
be sure if I hadn't & the damn place had burned down, they wouldn't
have paid anyway if they found out it was vacant. Anyway, anyone have
any advice on insuring an empty house while it is on the market?


FWIW, don't empty it. Go to Goodwill and buy some old useless furniture and
put it in there. Leave the power on and put some lights on timers. Have
the neighbors park their cars in the driveway occasionly.

No one will insure an empty house.



I had an uncle that died, and a few months later my aunt went into a
nursing home. The house was vacant. My mother being the only
remaining relative was given power of attorney. She ran into a
similar problem, except the insurance company was not notified at that
point yet. When the insurance was due, my mothers lawyer told her
that there could be a problem if the ins company found out. She
suggested renting it to someone. Mom got all nervous and said the
renters will wreck the place and etc etc etc...

I lived too far away to directly help, but I went to visit mom and I
had to go to that house to do a few repairs, plus I was given the
refrigerator, washer and dryer. While I was there, I solved the
problem. The next door neighbor came over while I was there and asked
if he could park one of his cars on the driveway, because he had too
many cars for his driveway (was trying to sell one of them), and was
always getting parking tickets on the street. I told him that I'd
discuss it with the family. I talked to the lawyer and we agreed to
charge the guy $10 a month for the driveway parking. (less than half
the cost of one parking ticket).

At the same time a few of the younger relatives in their 20's were
hired by mom and aunt to clean the house and get rid of most of the
furniture and stuff. They were being paid to do the cleaning, plus
made a small fortune selling all the antiques to antique shops. But
the lawyer wrote up a lease, in which they were renting the property
in trade for cleaning. They did sleep there one or two nights, but
most of the time they were just there cleaning and hauling stuff out.
Timers were also put on lights.

In the end, everyone was happy. The youngsters were making money, the
neighbor was not getting tickets, the legalities were worked out for
the insurance, and my mother could sleep again. (and I almost forgot,
the lawyer made a couple hundred too).

In other words, RENT the place to someone you know for a small amount,
(you can reimburse them too if you want). Make it a legal rental
lease, use a lawyer if needed, and you should be all set. I think I'd
still find another ins. company though.


JimR December 16th 05 02:18 AM

Insuring a vacant house
 
I think your agent has either taken too hard a line or misunderstood the
circumstances of the house status.

1. It's not empty -- you've already said you've left some appliances in
it --
2. It's not unattended -- you have a real estate agent that is looking
after it in preparation for sale and you're still maintaining it -- keeping
the heat on and the utilities working, clearing the sidewalks, mowing the
lawn, caring for the garden, etc.
3. You haven't abandoned it -- you'll have to be in the house for final
clean-up, closing, etc. In fact, although you'll be travelling, you won't
completely move out of the house until you close the sale.

In other words, you haven't left the house unoccupied, it's just that at
some time in the future it will no longer be your primary residence -- it
will remain your primary residence until you actually close on a new house
in WA. Hopefully you will be able to sell this house quickly and move on.

In my case, I bought my new house before putting my old one up for sale. I
insured the new house with USAA, and stated that the new house was going to
be my primary residence. It took three months to sell the old house, and
during that time USAA provided insurance for both locations.

There are variations -- for example, many people have a vacation home or a
secondary home that may be unoccupied for months at a time.

If you're eligible you might check with USAA on how to handle this
question. Since they primarily cover military officers they are regularly
faced with questions of houses that will be vacant for extended periods of
time. You might also call your state insurance commissioner's office in
Columbus and ask them for advice. Regards --

wrote in message
ups.com...
Thanks for the helpful replies. House is in Ohio, will be totally
empty, save some appliances. Unfortunately I can't even check on it,
since we're moving to WA state. I have one rather knuckle-headed
neighbor who's marginally reliable, I'm going to ask him to keep an eye
open, but who knows? I'll check out the netquote.com site, also I
think I'll try calling Farmer's directly; although I've used this agent
for about 20 years for house & car insurance, he could be mistaken, or
as someone suggested on another forum, doesn't want to bother
re-writing the policy if he doesn't get anything out of it. That would
be too bad, but not a huge shock. BTW the house is paid for, so a
mortgage is not an issue. This situation must come up literally
millions of times a year in the US, I can't imagine there's no way of
accommodating it. Needless to say, I'd like to see the place sell
about an hour after I vacate, but that's not terribly likely...

Rick




Steve Kraus December 16th 05 04:08 AM

Insuring a vacant house
 
http://www.foremost.com/products/basics/faqs.htm

Vacant homes is on their list.

markansas859 December 16th 05 04:37 AM

Insuring a vacant house
 
this was back around 1991, but may work for your situation.

neighbors moved from Louisiana to Georgia, and house was vacant

they paid my brother to "live there", and occupy the house

they kept utilities and phone on, we just changed the phone number to his
name

real estate agent loved the idea, he just rolled up his sleeping bag and
stashed it in the utility room for open house.

and it was convenient for real estate lady to have access to a phone when
she was doing open houses.

house was right next door to us, and was nice to have extra room when we had
out of town company..... call furniture rental place, and had them a nice
bedroom setup for 2 weeks, saving hotel expenses.

lady that bought the house is still there... her hubby got sent packing
sooon after they moved in



Joshua Putnam December 16th 05 04:38 AM

Insuring a vacant house
 
In article ,
says...

This is a pretty much standard policy with most insurance companies. I got
around it by buying insurance for "vacant house under construction". Problem
with those policies is that you must prepay for the year and there is no
refund if you cancel three months down the road.


Again, that depends on the carrier.

Rules will be different in different states, but if you insure a
vacant home with Foremost here in WA, you don't have special
restrictions on billing or cancellations, you can put it on two pay
or four pay and you do get a refund for unearned premium if you
cancel.

I'd start by checking the details of the existing policy, there's a
good chance the house will remain insured until the current term
expires, with a temporary reduction in coverage while vacant.

--
is Joshua Putnam
http://www.phred.org/~josh/
Updated Bicycle Touring Books List:
http://www.phred.org/~josh/bike/tourbooks.html

[email protected] December 16th 05 04:49 AM

Insuring a vacant house
 
There are lots of impoverished but responsible graduate students with
and without families that need a cheap place to live while they are
writing their dissertation in linguistics or literature or the
granulated peruvian treeleaf or whatever research project. Maybe
contact a nearby university for a list of candidates and have them
apply, these are scholars, not frat party animals in undergraduate
schools. You will safekeep your house and help the knowledge base of
mankind too. Ask for and check references.-Jitney


Joshua Putnam December 16th 05 04:52 AM

Insuring a vacant house
 
In article pqnof.631467$_o.295488@attbi_s71,
says...

"louie" wrote in message
oups.com...
I recently moved and it took about 3 months to sell the property. My
local agent was much more understanding and suggested, hypothetically,
that IF a person were to move and leave the property unattended, the
insurance company would drop the coverage, and the mortgage company
could then possibly call the mortgage due at that point. Her advice
was something along the lines of "no need to tell them about it until
you have closed on the property sale, just forward your mail"


Yeah, just try to collect on a claim when it burns! HA HA HA!!!


Unless the policy contains an exclusion for vacancy, the company
would have a hard time refusing to pay a claim if the policy was in
force on the date of the loss.

Again, rules vary by policy, by company, and by state, but as an
example, the policy I have handy has, in its Conditions, "The
residence premises may be vacant or unoccupied without limit of time,
except where this policy states otherwise."

Now, the company won't normally accept a currently-vacant house for
that policy, and they might decline to renew a policy if they know
the house is going to be vacant, but if they've already issued the
policy, and the policy is in force at the time of a loss, the policy
is still valid and they will still pay.

--
is Joshua Putnam
http://www.phred.org/~josh/
Updated Bicycle Touring Books List:
http://www.phred.org/~josh/bike/tourbooks.html

louie December 16th 05 02:26 PM

Insuring a vacant house
 
Oscar_Lives wrote:
Liers get what they deserve


I got exactly what I expected, a sold house and no problems from either
the insurance or the mortgage company. The agent I mentioned was my
INSURANCE agent - the local representative of the insurance company who
held my policy. She knew about it and advised me not to make any
official notice about it to the main office. I took her advice and
things turned out just fine.



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