Tuesday, August 11, 2020

Home Insurance: Above-Ground Versus In-Ground Swimming Pools


Your Greensboro home insurance coverage, an essential part of your family's risk mitigation plan, protects your home, your personal possessions and your assets if you're ever held liable for someone getting injured while on your property. A standard Greensboro home insurance policy consists of several components including:

  • Dwelling coverage
  • Coverage for other structures
  • Personal property coverage
  • Liability coverage

If you own a swimming pool, it can have an effect on one or more of these policy components, depending on the specifics of your policy and the way your pool is classified by your insurer.

An “Attractive Nuisance”

To your insurer, a swimming pool is what's known as an “attractive nuisance”. This means that it's a hazardous object that may appeal to or attract children but may also cause them harm. It's one more item added to your insurance policy that may cause you to have to increase your coverage, particularly in view of the liability implications a swimming pool represents.

Pool Classifications

A residential swimming pool may be classified in one of three ways:

  1. An in-ground pool
  2. An above-ground permanently installed pool
  3. An above-ground temporarily installed pool

Your Greensboro home insurance policy will generally cover damages to your swimming pool, but how it does so and the limits on claim amounts will depend on how your insurer classifies the pool. Policies cover your pool for damage from the same perils as the dwelling coverage component of your insurance contract. These may include perils such as fire, lightning, hail, wind, explosions, vehicle collision, vandalism and more. Take note that exclusions to coverage include earthquakes, floods, wear & tear (such as a ripped lining) and neglect.

In-ground pools may be considered as part of your home, in which claims payments will be made from your dwelling coverage, or as other structures, in which claims are paid from the other structures portion of your policy. Why this matters is because some companies consider an in-ground pool as part of the main home structure, while others consider it an external structure similar to a shed, a fence or a detached garage.

Most damage claims for other structures have a maximum payoff limit of 10% of your dwelling coverage amount. Above-ground temporarily installed pools, on the other hand, are considered personal property, which typically has a higher payout limit than for other structures. Personal property coverage is often capped at $100,000.

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