What to do when your liability forecast looks cloudy? An umbrella policy may be a great source of protection.

Have you heard of the term “Umbrella Policy,” but are not sure what it is? Has a professional, such as an attorney or financial planner recommended one, but you are not sure if it is right for you?  

What is an umbrella policy?  

In simple terms, an umbrella policy provides an additional layer of liability protection at a low cost. Umbrella coverage starts at $1 million in coverage and premiums start at a few hundred dollars per year. 

An umbrella policy extends over your home, vehicle, and rental insurance policies. For example, if your automobile policy runs out of money for the other party’s injuries, then the umbrella helps pay for the remaining amount. 

The goal is to have enough coverage to pay for a claim and keep the attorneys away from your assets, such as your home. 

Three real-life examples in which an umbrella claim was paid: 

  • The child of an insured engaged in a head-on collision causing a fatality. The child was at fault. The jury awarded the family of the victim millions of dollars. 
  • An insured is gardening and water spills on the ground. Later that day a friend comes over and visits, slips on the wet floor, thus causing medical and dental expenses. 
  • A tenant of an insured gets ill from carbon monoxide poisoning from a faulty furnace and claims permanent brain injury and demands major compensation. 

Three common misconceptions:  

Misconception #1:  An umbrella policy extends over your property coverage. 

Truth:  An umbrella policy does not extend over your property coverage. If you do not have enough dwelling coverage to rebuild your home after a fire, an umbrella policy will not help. An umbrella covers damage you cause to others, it does not apply to damage of your own property. 

Misconception #2:  Since you have an umbrella, you can lower the liability limits on your auto and home insurance. 

Truth:  The umbrella insurance company will require that you keep a minimum amount of liability coverage on the underlying policies. For vehicle insurance, it is typically $250,000 per person, $500,000 per accident, and $100,000 property damage. For properties, the minimum liability limit is usually $300,000. 

Misconception #3:  The claim must happen on your property. 

Truth:  A home insurance claim does not have to happen on your property. If, for example, you are walking your dog at the park and it bites a small child, your home insurance will pick up the claim and then the umbrella. 

Why is an umbrella policy an excellent value? 

You are exchanging only a few hundred dollars for a million(s) in liability protection. As a bonus, most umbrella policies provide defense costs outside their policy limits. What this means is if there is a potential covered claim, then the company will pay for your defense costs in addition to the settlement. So, if your umbrella coverage is $2 million and the attorney’s fees to defend you total $300,000, the attorney’s $300,000 in fees are paid outside of the $2 million in coverage that you have. Comparing the umbrella cost with what you would pay for an hour of an attorney's time makes them quite a bargain! 

What coverage limit is right for me? 

Umbrella limits start at $1 million in coverage but can exceed $10 million in coverage. 

In the United States, you can sue for anything and for any amount of money. As a rule of thumb, an umbrella limit should meet or exceed your assets (within reason), since your assets are what is typically at risk. A financial planner is a great resource to help calculate your net worth. 

What if you have additional questions?  

Your insurance agent and your financial planner are useful resources for additional information on umbrella policies. 

When it is raining liabilities, umbrella insurance policies are a great source of protection so you don’t get “wet”! 

 Fred Giron Headshot

Fred Giron 
fgiron@acrisure.com 

Fred Giron, CPCU, AIC, is an account executive at Acrisure or 12 years, in Los Alamitos, CA. He specializes in personal line P&C products using a variety of insurance carriers. Fred has spoken on insurance at Cal State Fullerton, UC Irvine Extension, and the Financial Planning Associate of Orange County. He is also a member of the Orange County CPCU Society (Charted Property Casualty Underwriters) and licensed in Property & Casualty Insurance for 19 years. 

Disclosure:  

Apella Capital, LLC (“Apella”), DBA Apella Wealth is an investment advisory firm registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The firm only transacts business in states where it is properly registered or excluded or exempt from registration requirements. Registration with the SEC or any state securities authority does not imply a certain level of skill or training. Different types of investments involve varying degrees of risk, and there can be no assurance that the future performance of any specific investment, investment strategy, product or any non-investment-related content made reference to directly or indirectly in this material will be profitable, equal any corresponding indicated historical performance level(s), be suitable for your portfolio or individual situation, or prove successful. Due to various factors, including changing market conditions and/or applicable laws, the content may not be reflective of current opinions or positions. Please note the material is provided for educational and background use only. Moreover, you should not assume that any discussion or information contained in this material serves as the receipt of, or as a substitute for, personalized investment advice. Diversification seeks to improve performance by spreading your investment dollars into various asset classes to add balance to your portfolio. Using this methodology, however, does not guarantee a profit or protection from loss in a declining market. Past performance does not guarantee future results. All data is from sources believed to be reliable but cannot be guaranteed or warranted.  

No current or future client should assume that any discussion or information contained in this material serves as the receipt of, or as a substitute for, personalized investment advice. As with any investment strategy, there is the possibility of profitability as well as loss. 

Apella Wealth does not provide insurance services or legal advice and nothing either stated or implied here should be inferred as providing such advice. Fred Giron and PHD Insurance Brokers, Inc are not affiliated with Apella Wealth.  

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