I have progressive and can't really comment on if they are good or not because so far I've never had a claim. I figure that's when you find out how good a company or your coverage is. One thing I did not see mentioned in this thread (maybe I missed it) is that there are different coverage for replacing your boat should something happen to it. There's agreed upon value's, depreciated values ect. Basically you want to be able to replace your boat with minimal costs. I have been told that a person should really consider purchasing a yacht policy. They are only slightly more expensive but are more inclusive. Just a thought.
I'm posting a post from another boating forum I frequent. I believe there is some good info in there for all of us. I don't think I've ever read the fine print in my policy before.
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First off, I'm a marine insurance guy, and this post is about education.
I do presentations for yacht clubs and other organizations about insurance, and EVERY boat owner needs to read and understand their policy- before you need it. Hopefully this will be made a sticky topic.
I just had a call from the Vice Commodore of an Idaho anglers association about a situation he's going thru. He owns a newer aluminum pilothouse boat- 200hp outboard, full electronics, downriggers, etc- $70k worth of boat, engine, trailer, and accessories. It was afloat in Lake CdA, and being used for winter fishing.
On Superbowl Sunday, the boat was resting comfortably in its slip. The next day, the boat was on the bottom.
Cause of loss: a thru-hull had failed from repeated freezing and warming, allowing water into the boat.
Claim-DENIED. He was covered by a boat policy from his normal insurance guy; that policy had a specific exclusion clause for Idaho regarding freezing claims. So, he's had to pay out of pocket for salvage, transport to a boatyard, storage, and teardown of the engine...and there's more to come. He thought he was covered.
Note I said he had a boat policy- not a yacht policy. In short, he probably would have been fully covered under a yacht policy, as most yacht policies don't have that exclusion regarding freezing. Further, the yacht policy would have covered the salvage, transport, pollution spill, storage, and repairs.
Yacht= coverage type, not boat size. My personal 24' Trophy is on a yacht policy.
Yacht= agreed valuation payout in the event of a total loss, without depreciation or deductible.
Boat= depreciated payout in the event of a total loss (similar to your auto insurance policy).
READ YOUR POLICY. Ask your agent if your policy is a boat or yacht policy. Ask about how your policy pays you in the event of a total loss and partial loss. Ask about your navigation limits- especially since most of us like to trek offshore in search of the almightly longfin. Ask him/her if the boat is covered if you let a friend borrow the boat.
Most personal lines insurers (State Farm, Allstate, Foremost, Safeco, Pemco, etc) offer boat policies.
I don't represent the guy that had the loss- but his situation is a good example of what can happen. Insurance needs to be there when you need it- and this guy (so far) has gotten screwed.
The season is coming up fast- I really don't want to read about any of us that have a loss, and get the short end of the stick.