It is outrageous the quotes I am receiving right now regarding homeowners. Without fail, 2% here, 2% there. Is anyone having luck finding anything else?
Use insurance for catastrophes and carry large deductibles.CS78 said:
Ive been at 5% for years. Never plan to make a claim unless I have a total loss. We'd all be better off if everyone used that mentality. The insurance companies are going to recoup their cost somewhere and the house never loses.
Yes, you see hail every year, but the average is probably around 10 for total loss and actually having a claim.degreedy said:
but 2% wind/hail, in most places you are guaranteed to see a hailstorm once a year that does significant enough damage to warrant a replacement... how can some people even afford this on top of the already elevated premiums? I thought the premiums were in place to account for the potential risk of activating one's policy. this is getting redamndiculous.
Seriously? You think most homeowners need to actually replace their roof once a year? I've owned for close to 30 years and done this once, but the hailstorm hit everybody for miles. It's what I call a once in a lifetime extreme.degreedy said:
but 2% wind/hail, in most places you are guaranteed to see a hailstorm once a year that does significant enough damage to warrant a replacement... how can some people even afford this on top of the already elevated premiums? I thought the premiums were in place to account for the potential risk of activating one's policy. this is getting redamndiculous.
100% this.rwtxag83 said:Seriously? You think most homeowners need to actually replace their roof once a year? I've owned for close to 30 years and done this once, but the hailstorm hit everybody for miles. It's what I call a once in a lifetime extreme.degreedy said:
but 2% wind/hail, in most places you are guaranteed to see a hailstorm once a year that does significant enough damage to warrant a replacement... how can some people even afford this on top of the already elevated premiums? I thought the premiums were in place to account for the potential risk of activating one's policy. this is getting redamndiculous.
IMHO, redamndiculous is somebody who thinks they should replace their roof once a year would not understand why insurance charges higher rates/deductables.
htxag09 said:
The roof deal really does annoy me....
We replaced a roof on our home about 2 years ago. It was 20+ years old and had a leak. The leak was repairable but we were going to sell or rent the house and knew a new roof would be beneficial regardless. We called 5 roofers. 3 of them showed us in their system how we had a hail storm within x years and they thought we could get it covered under insurance, sending us a quote for like $25K. No, we aren't going through insurance, etc., etc., Give me an out of pocked quote. Instantly dropped to $10K.
The whole process soured me. First, roof didn't have hail damage. Second, how the hell does a job increase 2-3x simply because insurance is paying?
CS78 said:
Ive been at 5% for years. Never plan to make a claim unless I have a total loss. We'd all be better off if everyone used that mentality. The insurance companies are going to recoup their cost somewhere and the house never loses.
htxag09 said:
The roof deal really does annoy me....
We replaced a roof on our home about 2 years ago. It was 20+ years old and had a leak. The leak was repairable but we were going to sell or rent the house and knew a new roof would be beneficial regardless. We called 5 roofers. 3 of them showed us in their system how we had a hail storm within x years and they thought we could get it covered under insurance, sending us a quote for like $25K. No, we aren't going through insurance, etc., etc., Give me an out of pocked quote. Instantly dropped to $10K.
The whole process soured me. First, roof didn't have hail damage. Second, how the hell does a job increase 2-3x simply because insurance is paying?
Absolute said:
I see the trend! Somehow insurance companies F everything they touch up in their quest to make a profit and we all pay for it!
Really doesn't make any sense. Why do we let it continue?
I am not here for arguing. This is not meant to be combative. I am both a roofer and an aggrieved homeowner paying way more than I think I should, so I can appreciate both sides of this exact situation you are referencing and am simply offering my perspective.Quote:
...how the hell does a job increase 2-3x simply because insurance is paying?
Yes, but you have to keep in mind with these programs, roofers pay to participate. So, that cost is built in, profits are built in, they require extended warranties which are then built in, and then a bunch of stuff 'just in case' so the roofer doesnt lose his margin if the house is a POS and needs 45 sheets of plywood because the roof hasn't been maintained in 20 years. So, your roofer does it for 700/sq, doesn't reap the profits of 700/sq., but the carrier PAYS 700/sq.JP76 said:
$700 per square for shingles ?
Quote:
...Make sure your house is accurately appraised. USAA will allow you to reduce your appraised cost to 80%. Do it.
jenn96 said:Quote:
...Make sure your house is accurately appraised. USAA will allow you to reduce your appraised cost to 80%. Do it.
How does this work? Is it the appraised cost to rebuild?
jenn96 said:
How can I find a realistic PSF cost to rebuild? I know it's a lot more than the average PSF price if I were to sell. I'm in cypress 77429.
JP76 said:
Well at that rate i can see why insurance premiums are through the roof. Is this just one ins company ? Because I have never seen that on any insurance roof jobs I have completed.
Or when you say $700 is this a 2 story house with 18/12 pitch ?