After she traded in her Nikonos underwater camera for
a digital SLR system, Undercurrent reader Barbara Shively
(La Plata, MD) decided to buy dive equipment insurance for
both her and her husband’s dive cameras and computers. She
bought it at H20insurance.com, sponsored by Divers Alert
Network (DAN). While on a night dive in Grand Turk in
November 2005, Shiveley had a major flood in her underwater
camera system. She immediately filed a claim and got a reimbursement
check soon after with no red tape involved. “Once
I supplied them with the requested documentation, my claim
was handled to my complete satisfaction.”
Do you prefer a check to cover damages,
or your gear repaired or replaced? |
Shiveley was one of many Undercurrent subscribers who
wrote in about their experience with dive insurance claims.
Besides DAN’s H20, other readers have purchased insurance
through the Dive Equipment Protection Plan (DEPP)
or listed their gear on homeowner insurance policies. The
majority have been pleased with the results. But for those of
you who have not yet insured your dive gear, there are issues
to consider before buying a policy. Would you prefer a check
to cover damages, or have your gear repaired or replaced?
Will filing a claim affect your policy? Read on to contrast and
compare policies.
H20: Check is in the mail
Both H20 and DEPP insure loss or injury to any dive gear
you’re wearing or using worldwide. DEPP and H20 vary in
coverage, premiums and exclusions. H20’s minimum premium
is $100 and covers up to $6,667 worth of gear. DEPP has a
minimum premium of $30 insuring up to $2,000. For equipment
valued at more than $5,000, it has a 4 percent surcharge.
Standard deductibles are $100 for H20 and $25 for DEPP.
Another difference is that H20 will send you a check based
on the cost of restoring or replacing your loss, while DEPP
repairs or replaces your gear. Betty Orr, director of insurance
services at DAN Services, says H20 is better at paying checks
than repairing gear. “This is a relatively new offering so we’re
still educating our underwriter [Senn, Dunn, Marsh, Roland
LLC in North Carolina].” She says reimbursement checks are
typically mailed within 30 days. “This also lets you support
your local dive shop and maybe even upgrade.”
H20 Insurance requires serial numbers of any item insured
for more than $2,500. The standard deductible is $100, except
for water damage, then it’s either 10 percent of the claim or
$250, whichever is greater. Low-value items like gloves, booties,
and dive bags can be declared as miscellaneous equipment for
up to $500. H20 covers items to the declared amount, paying
the lesser of the cost of replacing or restoring, although reader
Michael Hofman (San Francisco, CA) has an issue with that
cost versus his H20 premium. “When I flooded my Olympus
C4040, they just gave me what the depreciated value was
worth, about $30.” He was told the claim takes into account
the current value of the equipment, not the original price of
$600. “The policy price was not inexpensive so I realized that
the insurance is not worth it for me. Now, I ‘self insure.’”
Jay Haldeman, vice president of Senn, Dunn, Marsh,
Roland LLC, H20 Insurance’s underwriter, says the policy
does indeed base the replacement cost on the acquisition or
purchase price, not the depreciated value. However, adjusters
are always researching equipment costs and finding that the
cost to buy high-tech gear consistently goes down. “That digital
camera you paid $500 for three years ago will be cheaper
today, so you can buy a similar camera that does the same
things or more for a lesser price.”
Don’t assume dive accident insurance
will cover your equipment. |
DEPP: Replace or Repair
DEPP, on the other hand, has an extensive list of equipment
suppliers it uses to repair or replace gear, says Dixie
Lehrmitt, who handles enrollment. Even though it’s not for
those who prefer cash back, readers rated DEPP good on follow-
through. Ed Kincaid (Fayetteville, GA) had his dive lights
and dive computers stolen out of his luggage on a return trip
from Cozumel two years ago. He filed a claim with the airline
and received just a fraction of the costs. He also reported it to
DEPP and a week later he had new equipment.
It’s not as easy for older gear that has been discontinued
and is hard to find. Linda Rutherford (Montara, CA) felt
like DEPP left her hanging after she flooded her Olympus
7070 camera, insured for $400. DEPP offered to replace it
but Olympus had discontinued the entire line and had no
comparable product. Then DEPP said it would give her $400
to purchase one on eBay. “I kept bidding and losing to people bidding up to $800,” says Rutherford. Finally, she wrote to
Olympus and they found a refurbished model she could buy
for $400. DEPP’s Lehrmitt says if the gear is discontinued,
DEPP will give cash if you can provide a sales receipt. If
it’s totally unavailable, Lehrmitt says DEPP will provide an
upgrade within the same price range.
Comparisons and Contrasts
H20’s deductible for flooding covers all camera accessories,
while DEPP’s policy states that if your camera, lens and strobe
are all flooded, you must pay the deductible on each. If the
airlines lose your gear, DEPP provides $150 reimbursement for
rental gear until your bags are found. H20 doesn’t offer that.
Regarding dive watches, DEPP’s fine print states they
must be designed and exclusively used for diving and diverelated
activities to be insured, and only up to $500. H20
doesn’t have this limitation but DAN’s Orr says multiple
claims filed for lost Rolexes in the first two years that H20
Insurance was offered led DAN to eliminate coverage for
“mysterious disappearances.” “Those apply to situations when
you thought you had put your tank in the outbuilding but it
disappeared, or you jumped off the boat with camera in hand
but came back empty-handed,” she said. “A few people who lost their Rolexes ruined it for everybody else.” Both H20 and
DEPP say their insurance only covers definitive incidents such
as crushed gear and flooded cameras. Filing a police report is
a requirement if you’re claiming due to theft.
Don’t assume DAN’s dive accident insurance will
cover your gear in all situations. Readers Bob and Marilyn
Puschinsky (Seabrook, TX) found out the hard way when their
gear literally went up in flames. “We lost a lot of equipment
when the Maldives liveaboard we were on last February caught
fire, exploded and sank into the Indian Ocean with everything
on board,” says Bob. They had DAN’s Preferred Plan, which
only covers equipment loss when a diver is in the water. “DAN
covered nothing, although our State Farm homeowners’ policy
covered everything, less the deductible.”
Orr says many people are confused about the differences
between DAN’s dive accident and dive equipment insurance,
but the latter would have covered this. “Accident insurance
only covers dive accidents,” she says. “A boat catching on fire
is horrifying but it’s not a diving accident.”
Watch Your Premiums
Many readers also insure gear through their homeowners’
policies. More expensive equipment can be placed as listed assets. The upside is that your gear is covered even when it
leaves the house. If it’s stolen out of the trunk of your car or
goes up in flames in the Indian Ocean, the carrier will reimburse
at replacement value.
But beware of the effect dive gear claims will have on your
premiums. Reader David Morris (Fort Worth, TX) had used
both DEPP and H20 to insure his gear but, thinking them too
pricey, decided to add dive camera equipment to his Allstate
home policy as a listed asset. “It was all-risks coverage without
any deductible and cheap – I covered $4,000 of equipment
for $39 a year.” Then in 2005, his camera was stolen topside
in Kosrae. The claim amount was $750, on the edge of being
so small that Morris almost didn’t make the claim. In April,
his policy renewals arrived and the premium increases were a
big surprise. “A 30 percent premium increase over three years
would cost me $800. But at the time of my claim, I was told
that even if I had withdrawn my claim, it was ‘in the system’
and would count against me.” So while it appeared that Morris
was saving money by not using DEPP or DAN, that was only
true if he had no claim. “My claim’s eventual impact on future
premiums was much larger than the amount of the check I got.
I am changing carriers, of course.”
He may have no more luck if he goes to another carrier,
says Eric M. Goldberg, assistant general counsel for the
American Insurance Association. Each carrier has different
rules and typically don’t disclose them. “Some may do nothing,
others impose a surcharge, and still others will put you
into a different ratings classification.” That’s why it’s important
to compare your deductible to the amount of your claim, he
says. “Say your deductible is $1,000 and your stolen regulator
was $1,400 – does it make sense to file a claim?”
Both DEPP and H20 Insurance say the benefit of their
policies is that claims to them will never jeopardize your home
insurance. Still, a few readers complain that the policies are
pricey for just a year’s worth of coverage at a time. Reader
James Heimer (Houston, TX) also questions the latest round
of premium hikes. “Close inspection of my most recent renewal
policy indicates more exclusions, higher deductibles and less
generous settlement terms, especially in cases of water damage.
These are general provisions, not anything having to do with
having filed a claim. My suspicion is that their claim history
indicated they were being a bit generous in their settlement
costs versus their premiums.”
H20’s Haldeman admits rates did go from $1.50 per
$100 in gear to $2.25, then $3, but the last increase was in
December of 2003. “When we first started, there was no actuarial
data, so coverage was extremely broad. What we found
was that a couple of very large claims jeopardized the entire
integrity of the program.” Those missing Rolex watches, no
doubt. But Haldeman says his firm is not planning any new
premium hikes for now. “We’re sensitive to the fact that dive
insurance is not like auto insurance and that not everyone
renews on an annual basis.”
Whether you renew or are thinking of insuring your gear
for the first time, take all factors – premium cost, coverage type
and exclusions -- into consideration. If you only take one or two
trips a year, do you really need coverage? On the other hand,
is it worth filing a claim on your homeowner policy when the
ultimate cost will be more than a stolen camera? DEPP and
H20 have served their members well with few complaints but
when it comes to any type of insurance, think carefully before
you purchase -- and before you file that claim.