As opposed to just hoping/relying on the "home & contents general insurance" to cover things ?

pomemax wrote:35$ for SSAA wish I could double its value would gladly pay 70 FOR 50k
pomemax wrote:I Just had a thought I wonder if I can get MY mrs to take out SSAA Insurance on her membership I think I will need to ring them up
cz515 wrote:The only issue I think might be that I assume all the guns are on your name.
You can ask to speak to the brokers section and see if they can give you a small policy for all your firearm collection. Saying that I would do that if you planning the wife idea.
As my basic rule in life is be 110% honest with insurance companies as they love take your premium and deny your claim esp if you make a deliberate "mistake"
Die Judicii wrote:cz515 wrote:The only issue I think might be that I assume all the guns are on your name.
You can ask to speak to the brokers section and see if they can give you a small policy for all your firearm collection. Saying that I would do that if you planning the wife idea.
As my basic rule in life is be 110% honest with insurance companies as they love take your premium and deny your claim esp if you make a deliberate "mistake"
Should be nothing illegal or dis honest.
Regardless of whose name they be registered in.
eg,,,
a) you have $60,000 of firearms in total.
b) you take out a policy $30,000 which would cover half.
c) your wife takes out another separate policy of $30,000 which would cover the other half.
d) two separate policies,,, two separate premiums paid.
e) ssaa offer up to $35,000 cover per policy
f) more than enough coverage.
g) No lies,,,,, No deceit,,, everything above board
h) In the unfortunate event of a fire destroying your house and contents,,,, you should be covered for the firearms in total.
No double dipping, or bullsh!t
Just because they might all be registered in the husbands name shouldn't make any difference.
It's not an individually named and serial numbered policy.
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Die Judicii wrote:Just wondering who does specific insurance on their firearms, accessories, ammo etc
As opposed to just hoping/relying on the "home & contents general insurance" to cover things ?
bladeracer wrote:I'm not convinced this would work.
I don't believe you can insure the same object on two separate policies.
For example, I don't think you can take out three $5000 policies on the same $5000 firearm. Or, more precisely, if you did you would still only get one payout on it, so two policies would have zero value. I guess you could do this listing three different owners, so you could decide at the time which policy to lodge so the payout goes to a specific person, but it seems too convoluted to be practical.
Insuring half of the property on two separate policies is fine, provided you specify exactly which half applies to which policy.
Undervaluing your property though doesn't work either. Taking out a $30,000 policy on a $60,000 collection will only pay you out half the value of whatever was lost. You can't wait until you have a fire and then declare that the half that went up in smoke was the half that was insured. If you want the insurance company to take the risk on your property being lost, they want to know exactly what it is they are insuring.
If you want to ensure zero problems with a claim, make all efforts to ensure the insurer knows _exactly_ what you are insuring _and_ what it is worth.
Die Judicii wrote:bladeracer wrote:I'm not convinced this would work.
I don't believe you can insure the same object on two separate policies.
For example, I don't think you can take out three $5000 policies on the same $5000 firearm. Or, more precisely, if you did you would still only get one payout on it, so two policies would have zero value. I guess you could do this listing three different owners, so you could decide at the time which policy to lodge so the payout goes to a specific person, but it seems too convoluted to be practical.
Insuring half of the property on two separate policies is fine, provided you specify exactly which half applies to which policy.
Undervaluing your property though doesn't work either. Taking out a $30,000 policy on a $60,000 collection will only pay you out half the value of whatever was lost. You can't wait until you have a fire and then declare that the half that went up in smoke was the half that was insured. If you want the insurance company to take the risk on your property being lost, they want to know exactly what it is they are insuring.
If you want to ensure zero problems with a claim, make all efforts to ensure the insurer knows _exactly_ what you are insuring _and_ what it is worth.
In a nutshell that is the exact point I was getting at.
Nothing illegal or underhanded.
As I understand it, SSAA don't ask for serial numbers etc,,,,,, but I would happily provide such if asked/needed
And,,,,, this is/was a hypothetical question anyway,,,,, near the beginning of this thread.
animalpest wrote:Your not going to get away with having two separate insurance policies for the same item. Only 1 will pay out.
Just think of someone with 6 insurance policies on their house/car/boat. Boat sinks and you get a tidy sum, don't think so
cz515 wrote:Ffs has anyone actually bothered reading the policy wording. Had anyone call ssaa as I said. NO
so i googled, and got the policy document. The policy covers firearms owned by you, so if your wife does not own those firearms they are not covered.
Don_Stevenson wrote:Hey everyone, I can probably provide a bit of perspective on some of these hypotheticals.
First a disclaimer - this is not personal advice. If you have any specific scenarios in mind about insurance products you should talk to a broker who deal in that area.
Background - I have been working in the insurance industry from the last 11 years, mostly in life insurance claims but I have experience with general insurance as well and most of the principles of disclosure and claim are common to both types of insurance.
In no particular order
1. It is perfectly fine and legal to have more than one policy covering an item, either for differing circumstances (travel vs at home) or because they are captured by two policies like the SSAA policy and a home and contents policy. However, it is also the law that you are unable to make a profit from an insurance claim so you can either only claim under one policy, or in many cases the insurers will want you to claim on both and they split the amount owed between them.
2. You could have two SSAA policies for two members of the same household covering a total of 2 x the $25K. However, as a claim manager if you were the "registered" owner of $49K of flashy gear and your wife was only the registered owner of one $1K rifle and you lost most of your stuff you may have a hard time getting that claim through based on the policy wording that was shared above. A claim team would most likely only pay you $25K for what's "registered" in your name. That line in the policy about registration is very important, even if your wife buys that nice new Sako TRG with her cash, if it's on a PTA with your name the insurer would definitely argue that you are the registered owner.
3. Home and contents policies may cover a lot of your ancillary gear like safes, reloading equipment, ammo (but this would be hard to prove since it likely fluctuates) but there are often sub limits for collections of stuff to limit liability. Example, if you have jewellery the policy might only cover $10k and up to $2k for each individual piece unless you list each item and provide a valuation or receipts. Check with your insurer and if necessary get specific cover.
4. When taking out a policy you used to have a duty to disclose anything that you knew could affect the insurers decision to insure you. This has been replaced with a duty to take reasonable care not to make a misrepresentation and how this works in practice is still a little murky except to say that if you are asked a question by an insurer you should try to answer it as accurately and completely as possible. Failing to share relevant information or making a misrepresentation are common causes of disputes in insurance and they sometimes occur through people not thinking and sometimes from people trying to keep costs down by not mentioning things.
5. If you ever find yourself in disagreement with an insurer be aware that they all have internal and external dispute resolution processes that don't cost the insured person anything. In particular if you don't get a satisfactory response from the internal process you can go to AFCA who tend to be quite consumer focused.
niteowl wrote:Has been an interesting read all this. We have thought about the subject for some time and have chosen to ignore the problem other than have our firearms and thermal gear stored in fire proof and high "contained value" Chubb safes and in a reasonably fire resistant and alarmed building. This way we have some security from theft and fire. Our problem was not so much in loss etc in the field for the ones in use at the time but storage security.
Nothing for associated extras.
It is embarrassing to quote the value.
Insurance companies do not want to know us with other than normal farm / building and 'normal" contents insurance.
Don_Stevenson wrote:It may depend on the insurance policy but I have just had a look at a policy I had on hand and there is no mention of limits on consumables except for replacing food in a refrigerator.
I would think that most insurers would replace a reasonable amount of ammunition or reloading components without requiring specific evidence but if you told them you had 10,000 rounds of something that just happened to go up in a fire they might want to see the receipts.
If you want to be sure you should get specific cover and make sure the amount of ammo you normally keep on hand is listed and check that there is no dollar limit on that category.
bladeracer wrote:
Our insurer is coming out in a few weeks to have a wander around the farm to ensure our cover is up to date.
Die Judicii wrote:bladeracer wrote:
Our insurer is coming out in a few weeks to have a wander around the farm to ensure our cover is up to date.
Oh no,,,,,,, I can sense a sharp increase in premiums coming,,,,,
Remember when a simple locked door would keep the baddies out ??
And even more so,,,,,, no such thing as a lock.
If someone comes and can't hear activity,,, they'd call out.
And if no response they'd go away and not even try the door handle.
Sigh,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,