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Coinsurance is often misunderstood in first party property insurance.


https://zalma.com/blog


 It  is a clause that causes frequent dissatisfaction with insureds over  claim settlements.  Historically most losses are partial losses. It is rare that the entire  building or amount of covered property is destroyed. Knowing this,  individuals deciding to insure their business property might insure for  only part of its value. The insured may reason that since it is more  likely to have a partial loss than a total loss, it is wasteful to spend  premiums on complete insurance.  This reasoning, of course, defeats the concept that insurance is the  sharing of risk. 


If the insured does not obtain insurance for the total  values at risk, then the risk is not shared equally with other insureds.  If most insureds chose to insure only part of the value of their  property, the insurance industry would still have approximately the same  number of claims to pay; however, the premiums that it collected to pay  those claims would be vastly reduced. In order to have enough money to  pay the losses, insurers would charge more for the lower values that  insureds chose to insure. Those insureds who chose to insure the full  value of their property would pay even more than they now pay for the  same amount of coverage. Encouraging insureds to carry full insurance on  their property allows premium levels to be fairer and that is why the  coinsurance provisions were created.  


The authors of the coverage forms were aware that expecting insured  individuals and businesses to carry coverage for 100 percent of the  value of their property was unrealistic. They allowed the choice (and  the corresponding premium level) of insuring against the risk of loss of  only a percentage of the value of the property.  The percentage that the insured chooses is called the “coinsurance  percentage.” The insured and the insurance company are coinsuring the  property because the percentage that the insured chooses not to insure  represents the amount of coverage that the insured will pay.  In order to encourage insureds to insure a reasonably high percentage of  their property’s value, the coverage form provides the incentive of  coverage extensions—broader coverage—to those insureds who choose at  least an 80 percent coinsurance.  


© 2021 – Barry Zalma, Esq., CFE,