Survey Shows Knowledge Gap Exists When it Comes to Flood Coverage
As part of National Flood Safety Awareness Week and in advance of the spring storm season, a survey commissioned by Allstate Insurance Company shows Americans may not be as familiar with their insurance policy as they should be, and therefore may have misconceptions that they have flood coverage when they don’t.
“Results indicate that there is a knowledge gap among some Americans who believe they are covered in the case of flood, but in actuality, are not covered,” said Mark Green, senior vice president, Allstate. “Unfortunately, we have seen this scenario play out following a number of major disasters. Some people believe flood is part of their standard homeowner policy and sadly, don’t realize they need a separate flood policy until it’s too late.”
Flood insurance is offered through the federal government’s National Flood Insurance Program and policies are sold and managed by private insurance companies like Allstate.
Floods are the number one natural disaster in the United States. The average flood loss cost is $30,000 for homeowners and $75,000 on commercial property according to the NFIP. Add to that the fact that floods can happen anywhere and in all 50 states. Nearly 20 percent of flood claims come from moderate to low-risk flood zones.
The study was based on telephone interviews with a nationally representative sample of 1,000 residents with homeowners or renters insurance, age 18 years and older across the United States. Interviews were conducted May 16-17 & 19, 2012, and the survey has a margin of error of + 3.1 percentat the 95 percent confidence interval. The survey investigates Americans’ attitudes, opinions and experiences about how well prepared and covered they are in the case of a natural disaster striking. The survey was conducted by FTI Consulting for Allstate.
Source: Allstate
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