Itās unlikely that your plans for the holidays include a phone call to your insurance agent. But if you are gifting a pricey piece of jewelry, you may want to pencil one in.
After all, ’tis the season to pop the question! Most engagements take place between Thanksgiving and Valentine’s Day, according to Wedding Wire. To protect your purchase, it’s wise to consider insuring engagement rings, wedding rings and other big-ticket gifts.
How to Insure an Engagement Ring
Standard homeowners and renters insurance covers belongings from fire and other perils named in a policy, but there are limits to how much money a policyholder can collect on a single piece of jewelry that has been stolen. In most policies, the ālimit of lability,ā on jewelry is in the ballpark of $1,500, well short of the average $6,000 spent on an engagement ring.
Buyers looking for engagement ring insurance or coverage on other valuable assets that exceeds the liability limit in their policy have two options, according to the Insurance Information Institute. You can either ask your insurance agent to increase your liability limit, or have them āscheduleā an individual piece of jewelry into your coverage by purchasing whatās called a floater policy.
Scheduling each piece or item may cost more in premiums, but it offers broader protection, because the floater covers losses of any type, including accidental losses ā such as dropping your ring down the drain of the kitchen sink or leaving an expensive watch in a hotel room ā that your homeowners insurance policy will not cover.
Floater policies by default, are replacement cost policies, meaning the insurer will replace a piece of jewelry with an item of like kind and quality if ever it is lost, stolen or damaged. Another benefit of the floater policy is that there is typically no deductible for a jewelry claim.
You can also choose to cover your engagement ring with a specialty jewelry policy. This could be a good option for those who don’t have a homeowners or renters policy, such as adult children living with their parents.
Learn more about jewelry insurance offered through AAA.
Insuring Other Expensive Gifts
Even if an engagement is not in your plans, you may still want to consider a floater on other high-priced purchases.
Floaters can be purchased on musical instruments, sports memorabilia collections, electronics and even family heirlooms. But first, said items must be professionally appraised or have a receipt dated within the past three years must be provided to the insurance agent, so the insurer knows what the item or items are worth.
It’s also good practice to keep an up-to-date, room-by-room home inventory, which you can catalog in a notebook or record on video. Either way you decide to do it, you want to document what you own and how much each item costs. Not only will this help you speed up claims and prove losses for your taxes, but it will also give you an idea of how much insurance you need.
Get in touch with a AAA insurance agent today.
Did you get engaged during the holiday season? Did you make sure to get engagement ring insurance? Tell us about it in the comments.
Play Wordrow
Hint: Symbol of commitment.