Sorry I missed this. Pardon the typos. I'm on Mobile. I'll clean it up on the desktop.
I'm gathering the main purpose of your pose can be summarized as "THE RENT IS TOO DAMN HIGH" and you want to save some money.
With that in mind, yes, you can decrease your deductible any time you see fit. USAA makes this a snap online.
Now, let's address some nuts of bolts, many of which have been addressed.
You have hail damage, or you think you might, and it seems there is a call for fraud….I'm not here to judge and frankly, I don't care what insurance carriers do if they approve my roof claims. Rest assured that USAA will do what it needs to do to insure that you aren't defrauding them, regardless of your intent. So, what I'm saying is, you might change it now, make a claim later, and then pay the lower deductible for the old damage. Is that fraud? Well, if insurance goes for it, then I don't think so. After all, they have adjusters and an army of professionals to root this out right? Is it ethical? I don't think so. But again, I'm not judging anyone for that. I've spent months fighting tough adjusters and stingy carriers on legit easy claims, so I get it.
With that out of the way, what may happen is:
They inspect your roof shortly after changing your deductible and find hail damage and then compel you to replace it now. Since the hail occurred previously, it might fall under your old deductible. Which means you're going to lay a higher premium and get stuck for the old deductible. 5800 for a full reroof is still a steal, but be aware of this possibility.
My non-roofer personal advice to save money on USAA is….
Keep your deductible at 2% but evaluate how often you've had hail. If you reduce it and then don't get a hail storm in 5 years, you've spent a bunch of money for nothing. Also, evaluate your houses value. USAA increase values without appraisal annually no matter what. They will allow you to reduce the value of your insured amount to 80% of its current stated value. This can save you a lot of money if USAA has you insured for RCV at 800k but your house is really worth 600k. In that case the reduced amount would be better and smarter. I did this with my own home and even with the reduced rate I could build it twice as big or twice as nice as it is.
To summarize, consider doing your roof soon at the old deductible, leave it at 2%, reduce the insured amount to 80% of current if reasonable….profit.
My opinion of insurance is that "They are banking on the possibility that you won't need it. You are banking on the possibility that you will."
I don't know where you live but if you're in texas, I'd wait until next February to decrease a deduc to me if you decide to do that anyway. Hail season starts most likely shortly after that. We could pick up something in October of this year though.
As always, feel free to call, text, or email if you want to bounce ideas or want any more details. I'm easy to get a hold of.
Infinity Roofing - https://linqapp.com/jason_duke --- JasonDuke@InfinityRoofer.com --- https://infinityrooferjason.blogspot.com/