Certain valuables, like jewelry and other expensive items, are more likely to be stolen, which is why standard homeowners insurance has special limits of liability (aka sublimits) on those items. The limit of liability on jewelry, watches, and fur theft is $1,500, which is the maximum dollar amount an insurer will pay out for that class of items in the event of theft. Firearms, silverware, and home business property also have their own collective sublimits.
Blanket coverage, or blanket insurance, is a home insurance add-on that increases the coverage limit for an entire class of personal property, like your jewelry collection, so that it’s insured at a higher value.
What is blanket coverage in homeowners insurance?
Blanket insurance isn’t a separate type of insurance policy, but instead something you can apply to your homeowners insurance. It allows you to group together (aka blanket) a specific class of personal property, like a collection of firearms, under one limit of coverage.
How does blanket coverage work for personal property?
Homeowners insurance policies have special limits of liability on business property and expensive valuables if they’re stolen. By adding blanket coverage, you’re collectively raising the sublimits on an entire class of items that have low limits of liability in a base policy. Blanket coverage is a worthy policy add-on if you own a collection of special valuables.
Below are some examples of personal property and their collective sublimits.
Theft of jewelry, watches, furs: $1,500
Theft of firearms: $2,500
Theft of silverware or gold plated ware: $2,500
Business property: $2,500
That means if $5,000 worth of jewelry, watches, and furs are stolen from your home, a standard home insurance policy will only reimburse a maximum of $1,500 for the loss. You’ll also have to pay your deductible, which is the amount you’re responsible for paying before your insurance kicks in. If your deductible is $1,000, you’ll only receive $500 in total for the loss.
This is where blanket coverage would come in handy; it would allow you to raise the sublimits on the entire category of items to $5,000.
Who needs blanket coverage?
Not everyone needs blanket insurance. Below are some examples of when you may want to consider blanket coverage.
If you own expensive valuables
As mentioned, if you own a large collection of jewelry, firearms, furs, or fine art, you may want to consider blanketing them under one coverage limit. That way you’re better protected in the event of theft.
If you have an at-home business
Standard home insurance only covers a limited amount of business property. If you have an at-home business, consider blanketing all of your work property — laptops, hard drives, printers — under one coverage limit.
If you own multiple properties
Blanket insurance can also apply to landlords or people who own multiple residences. If you own multiple properties, instead of taking an individual policy out on each location, you may be able to “blanket” them all under one coverage limit. This can be expensive, so speak with your insurance agent to learn if this is the right option for you.
Blanket insurance vs. scheduled property coverage
Both blanket insurance and scheduled personal property coverage endorsements increase coverage for valuable personal belongings that home insurance doesn’t fully cover. Below are the key differences between the two.
Blanket insurance: Increases limits of liability on an entire category of belongings, like a full jewelry collection
Scheduled personal property coverage: Increases the limits of liability for one specific item, like an engagement ring
To determine whether you need scheduled property coverage or blanket insurance you should ask yourself the following:
Is it just one belonging, like one expensive firearm? If so, then you likely only need to schedule that one item.
Do you own an entire collection of valuable belongings, like multiple firearms? Then blanket coverage may be the better option.
How much does blanket coverage cost?
The cost of blanket coverage will depend on how much you add to your policy. Generally, it costs an additional $100 for $10,000 in coverage, according to Policygenius data.