JCA1 said:
Your home in west memorial is insured for $250k? Congrats on the new 800 square foot home if you ever flood.
First, I thought most had learned this lesson the hard way after Harvey, but if you buy a NFIP flood policy backed by the government, all of them are a max $250k building, $250k contents for residential, and $500k building, $500k contents for commercial. You can buy private flood, or excess flood, most of which have a deductible of $250k (for residential) which means they dont pay until either your NFIP policy does, or you pay out of pocket if you dont have NFIP underlying.
Second, OP, how could you buy a policy from a company called Moneysafe and think it wasnt going to be a scam? Just being realistic, that would have thrown up red flags all over. NFIP flood policies are going up in premium, mostly because its bankrupting their system because they dont make enough to offset the losses (typical government), and im sure there are a million new scammer out there hoping they can entice someone with cheap prices when they are looking at their renewal premiums, but usually there is a reason it is cheap.
And if you want NFIP flood, at least the way the system is designed, there should be negligible differences in price from one carrier to the other because they are all just fronting paper for the same government program, regardless of who the broker is, big or small. So unless you are deciding to go the private flood route, shopping flood insurance through NFIP isnt going to yield much results.