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Hoots : Getting Earthquake Insurance on a new Mortgage I live in the bay area, CA where there are many earthquakes. I was recently reading: http://blog.petetheplanner.com/financially-what-happens-when-your-house-burns-down/ which - freshhoot.com

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Getting Earthquake Insurance on a new Mortgage
I live in the bay area, CA where there are many earthquakes.
I was recently reading: blog.petetheplanner.com/financially-what-happens-when-your-house-burns-down/ which stated that your home owners (fire etc) insurance goes first to your mortgage and then to you.

The value proposition of buying earthquake insurance in this context seemed to not make sense to me.

It is my understanding that mortgages require home owners insurance (at least in my area) but do not require earthquake insurance.

Here are my assumptions:

Earthquake insurance is not required by lender
It's quite expensive as well
Most other homeowners are not buying it (reason for slower price recovery)
A home owner in the area would put maybe 20% down on a loan
In the case of a catastrophic earthquake (enough to destroy a home
past the deductible) prices would drop significantly, the housing
market would be significantly impacted.
Earthquake insurance insures the value of the house not the land value (aka purchase price of the home before the earthquake) Ex bay area houses might cost 200k to build but sell for a million.

Question(s)

So would earthquake insurance pay out go to the lender?
If that's the case and house prices have fallen significantly isn't the borrower just insuring their ability to pay back the lender vs. say in a traditional house fire where the area (land) would retain value and they might rebuild and not lose significant value?
Ex if they didn't pay for the insurance they would probably be forced to walk away from the property (assuming large losses).

I guess I'm trying to figure out the values of earthquake insurance for a home buyer.

Fundamentally it seems to me that a major earthquake would change the value of the actual area significantly in a way a fire or flood would not.

Here's my example scenario:

House fire:
A house burns down and the insurance company pays the cost to rebuild and the family's living expenses while that occurs. Property values do not change. Deductible cost lost.

Major earthquake (made up prices for simplicity):
Nearly all of the buildings are severely damaged. The original cost to buy a house in the area is 100k. The buyer buys with 20% down (mortgage of 80k). The cost to build a house 50k. Insurance pays 50 + living expenses. 50 is applied to the mortgage. The home owner still owes 30k, and the land has little to no value.

What am I missing? It seems to me that with or without insurance the home buyer will never see a cent. Is the home buyer just paying to prevent a mortgage default? It seems like a pretty high cost to do so.


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Insurance you purchase is paid to you. However, even if the home is destroyed, you still owe all the money to the bank, and you no longer have the house as part of the land's value to guarantee the loan. So depending on how much the land is still worth versus how much you owe -- and exactly what the terms of the loan are -- you may need to use some or all of that money to repay enough of the loan to bring it back within the bank's policies. Read the terms of the loan -- consider asking a lawyer to clarify it for you if necessary; having a lawyer review that kind of major contract is always wise anyway. –


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The reason people buy earthquake insurance is not because normal insurance goes straight to the lender (it does not) but because oftentimes earthquake damage is not covered under normal homeowner's insurance. Natural disasters are often not covered under regular insurance. This is why people buy flood insurance. If your pipes burst and flood your house, your home owner's insurance will typically cover. If the local river floods and floods your house, oftentimes insurance will not cover. This is why a lot of state/federal agencies have separate pools of insurance. All earthquake insurance in California is technically through the state agency, though you may go through your homeowner provider to get it. I pay 0 a year for mine, I wouldn't say it's very expensive. My concern is not a giant earthquake that destroys my house. My concern is a large earthquake that might cause cracks in my slab or structural damage that my regular insurance is in no way obligated to cover but I need to fix. I think if you live in an earthquake prone area it's as reasonable as getting flood insurance if you live in an area known to flood.


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