Definition of "Earthquake insurance"

Mike Canary real estate agent

Written by

Mike Canaryelite badge icon

REMAX Space Center

Earthquake insurance is the type of insurance policy that specifically covers damages to your real estate caused by seismic activities.

It can refer both to the rare coverage against earthquakes that a very comprehensive homeowner’s insurance policy covers, and to a separate more comprehensive policy indemnifying exclusively damages caused by an earthquake or volcano eruption. That’s right: there’s actually no such thing as a volcano insurance or lava flow insurance. Because volcanoes are activated by the same principle of “ground” moving, coverage for its damages sometimes can fall under the same category of Earthquake insurance.

Damage claims can be filed for each earthquake and related shocks occurring more than 72 hours after the initial shock, and while earthquakes can cause fire, floods, explosions and tidal waves, typically the earthquake insurance does not cover losses from fires, floods, explosions, or tidal waves. Just whatever direct damage the house got by shaking and making things fall within it and inside of it.

The reason why earthquake insurance is not typically covered as an act of god on homeowner’s insurance – and when it is, it’s usually not that good - is that, like flood insurance, the risk management is too complicated. Imagine if the same company has several houses in an area that gets badly hit by an earthquake? Will the insurance company have the resources to indemnify all of the houses? It’s very different from theft, for instance. While an area might be all around dangerous, the thieve will hardly, in one strike, break into all of the homes of a street at once. The movie “Home Alone” proves our point.

But you’re not an earthquake insurance company, are you? You’re probably a homeowner asking yourself: “Do I need an earthquake insurance policy? Do I need flood insurance? Oh my God, what do I need to fully protect my home?!”

You don’t need earthquake insurance if you live in areas that are unfazed by tectonic plates. There’s no need for it in Florida and most of the east coast. However, it might be interesting to get them if you live in Washington, Utah, Montana, Arizona, Texas, Colorado and even New Mexico, and you definitely need earthquake insurance if you live in Alaska, California, Hawaii, Nevada, Washington, Idaho and Wyoming.

Which state has the most earthquakes?

For reference in answering if you need earthquake insurance here is the number of strong earthquakes in each state from 1974 to 2003:

  1. Alaska - 12,053
  2. California - 4,895
  3. Hawaii - 1,533
  4. Nevada - 778
  5. Washington - 424
  6. Idaho - 404
  7. Wyoming - 217
  8. Montana - 186
  9. Utah - 139
  10. Oregon - 73
  11. New Mexico - 38
  12. Arkansas - 34
  13. Arizona -  32
  14. Colorado - 24
  15. Tennessee - 22
  16. Missouri - 21
  17. Texas - 20
  18. Illinois and Oklahoma - 17
  19. Maine and New York - 16
  20. Alabama and Kentucky - 15
  21. South Carolina, South Dakota and Virginia - 10
  22. Nebraska and Ohio - 8
  23. Georgia - 7
  24. Indiana, New Hampshire and Pennsylvania - 6
  25. North Carolina - 3
  26. Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota and New Jersey - 2
  27. Louisiana, Rhode Island and West Virginia - 1
  28. Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Iowa, Maryland, North Dakota, Vermont and Wisconsin - 0

(Ranking from the Statista website. See the whole study here)

Real Estate Advice:

Do you live in an earthquake prone area? If you don’t, you still might be eligible for another natural disaster. America is so democratic that all possible natural disasters occur in this blessed land. Take a look at our worst cities for natural disasters article to find what is the hazard most likely to strike your area!

image of a real estate dictionary page

Have a question or comment?

We're here to help.

*** Your email address will remain confidential.
 

 

Popular Real Estate Terms

property having an easement right through another adjoining property. The property through which the easement passes is considered to have the servient tenement. ...

Cubic unit of measure for a board one-foot long, one-foot wide and one inch thick, or 144 cubic inches. These measurements are not actual, since they are stated prior to finishing and ...

Device that places the ownership of real property with one or more trustees for security until the loan is paid by the debtor. It is used in place of a conventional mortgage contract in ...

Potential customer or client in which there is a realistic chance of making the sale for the product or service. An example is a prospective purchaser of real estate that the real estate ...

Under law, a warranty in effect even if not expressly stated. It provides that real property sold is warranted to be appropriate for sale and is in proper condition even if not stated, ...

Written document by an official granting agency and signed by an empowered official certifying that some specific act including the fulfillment of certain requirements has occurred on a ...

Judicially determined minimum selling price for auctioned property. For example, a judge rules that a foreclosed home may be sold for less than $200,000, ...

Rental due on the leased property is formulated as a percentage of sales volume. There is typically a minimum rental specified. An example is a retail store that pays rental based on its ...

Aerial photos are photographs taken by cameras mounted in aircraft or satellites. Aerial photos are more commonly used in the industrial Real Estate Market to get a better feel of a ...

Popular Real Estate Questions