Motor Home Insurance

Motor Home Insurance

Motorhomes are built on a self-propelled motor vehicle chassis. They combine living quarters with self-propelled transportation. The personal auto policy was not designed to cover all the exposures of a Motorhome. Instead, Motorhomes are typically written on a stand-alone form designed specifically to fill in the coverage gaps that would normally appear if the motorhome was written on a personal auto policy.

This Miscellaneous Vehicle policy form gives coverage for the liability needed to get the vehicle licensed and gives coverage for the personal effects along with things like awnings and satellites or antennae that may extend from the unit itself. It also can be tailored to people that live in the motor home full-time.

Common Insurance Terms

Liability – Liability is defined as the legal responsibility for injury to another or damage to their property. Whether someone is liable (legally responsible) for an accident is something that ultimately is decided by a court of law, if the adjusters and attorneys don’t agree on who is liable first.

Generally, to be liable, someone must first be found negligent; meaning did they act, or fail to act, as a reasonable person would have acted? Damages are what the law says a negligent person owes to others. Damages can be divided into two categories, bodily injury and property damage. Although the policy has definitions for these terms, the law decides what they really mean and include. Since a large motor home can cause significant damage, a typical motor home policy will offer higher liability limits than a standard auto policy.

Vacation Liability – Because the motorhome may be parked at a site and used like a home or dwelling you need not only auto liability while you are driving but also personal liability coverage for when you are parked at a site.  Vacation liability pays for injuries that happen while you are parked, whether the injury happens in your RV, or at the site you are parked.

Bodily Injury (BI) Liability Limit – The per person BI limit is the most the carrier will pay for all BI damages in any one auto accident. Bodily injury means bodily harm and includes medical expenses, all necessary costs of medical treatment for injury, past, present and future; loss of income, loss of future earnings resulting from an injury; disfigurement, compensation for scarring and loss of looks; pain and suffering, this is an amount determined by a court to address the emotional or physical stress an accident or injuries caused.

Property Damage (PD) Liability Limit – Property damage means damage to or destruction of property including the cost to repair the damage, when the property is economically repairable, this is what is owed; actual cash value of damaged property, generally, the market value of the damaged property. If repair costs are more than the value of the property, then all that is owed is what the property is worth. Loss of use of property is included. This coverage includes the cost to rent substitute property, like the cost for a claimant to rent a car while their car is being fixed. It, also, includes loss of income suffered by a business if their building was damaged.

Some carriers offer 2 ways to provide liability coverage-either in split limits or combined single limit (CSL).

Split Limits –  provides separate amounts of coverage for bodily injury and property damage. The amount of bodily injury coverage is further split into 2 sub-limits; a limit of coverage per person and a limit per accident. On a declarations page of the auto policy the liability limits will commonly look like this. $100,000 bodily injury per person/$300,000 per accident and $100,000 property damage.

Combined Single Limit (CSL) provides one limit of coverage available to pay for both bodily injury and property damage in any one accident. Combined single limits provide more coverage in accidents where only one person suffers bodily injury or there is a large amount of property damage.

Minimum vs. Adequate limits – Every state has a minimum liability that a vehicle owner must have in order to register the vehicle. However, automobile liability is one of the largest exposures to financial loss faced by an insured. There is no way for you to limit how much you can be legally responsible to pay for damages. In some cases, judgments for damages can’t even be avoided by taking bankruptcy so it is important to discuss with your agent the amount of coverage that you feel is adequate to cover your assets and future earnings.

Medical Payments – Medical Payments is a “no-fault” coverage. It pays for people being hurt in car accidents, regardless of fault. The limit of liability for medical payments noted on the declarations page is a “per person” limit and there is no limit to the number of people that can collect.

Uninsured/Uninsured Motorist Coverage – Uninsured/Underinsured Motorists Coverage is liability coverage that the policyholder purchases in case other people negligently injure the policyholder and/or damage the vehicle with their car and do not carry any, or not enough, car insurance. To collect Uninsured Motorists coverage, the vehicle that injured the insured must be uninsured/underinsured and the vehicle operator must be at fault.

Personal Effects – The standard personal auto policy only provides physical damage to “your covered auto” and not to any personal effects. The home policy would be a logical place to look for coverage for personal effects, but the home policy has strict limits on personal property located off the “residence premises”. Personal effects coverage is a standard coverage included on most motor home policies and provides coverage for your personal effects not permanently installed in the motorhome.

Definition of Collision – Collision is defined to mean the upset of the auto, the auto being overturned; the impact of the auto with another vehicle or object, this includes hitting something with the vehicle or the vehicle getting hit by something else, whether moving or stationary.

Definition of Other than Collision – Other than Collision specifically includes, but is not limited to, the following causes of loss:

  • Contact with a bird or animal
  • Missiles or falling objects
  • Fire
  • Theft or larceny, When a covered auto is stolen and then wrecked by the thieves, theft is considered the proximate cause, not collision.
  • Explosion or earthquake
  • Windstorm
  • Hail, water or flood
  • Malicious mischief or vandalism
  • Riot or civil commotion
  • Breakage of glass, If the insured has glass broken in a collision, they can choose to cover the glass under collision, so they don’t have to pay a second deductible on their other than collision coverage on the glass.

Additional Coverages – Your agent can help you with other coverages that are available on a motorhome policy such as full replacement coverage, full timer’s (homeowner-like), loss assessment, etc.

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