So your house just got hammered by Mother Nature, and now you’re staring at a hotel room that costs more per night than your monthly Netflix subscription. You’re eating takeout for every meal, doing laundry at the coin-op down the street, and wondering if your insurance company will help foot this crazy expensive bill.
The short answer? It depends, but there’s a good chance you’re covered. Let’s figure out if you’re about to get some relief for those mounting expenses.
The Magic Words: “Additional Living Expenses”
Here’s what you need to know: If your homeowners or renters policy covers the disaster that damaged your home, it probably also covers your extra living costs while you can’t stay there. Insurance companies call this “additional living expenses,” but you can call it “thank goodness I don’t have to pay for this hotel room myself.”
Think of it this way: Your policy doesn’t just cover fixing your house – it covers keeping you housed while the fixing happens.
When Your Insurance Company Will Pay Up
Your insurance will cover your hotel, meals, and other extra costs if you had to leave because your home was damaged by something your policy covers. Here’s a real-world example:
A tornado rips through your neighborhood and damages your roof. You can’t stay in your house during repairs because there’s literally a hole where your ceiling used to be. Your homeowners policy covers tornado damage, so it’ll also cover your hotel bills, restaurant meals, and other extra costs.
The key word here is “damaged.” Your home has to actually be hurt by whatever happened.
When You’re Out of Luck
Here’s where it gets tricky: If you left your house because of a power outage or evacuation, but your actual home wasn’t damaged, your policy won’t pay for your hotel bills.
You evacuated because officials told everyone to leave? That’s smart, but if your house came through unscathed, you’re paying for that hotel room yourself.
The Flood Insurance Plot Twist
Now here’s where things get really interesting – and potentially frustrating. Most regular homeowners policies don’t cover floods at all. Zero. Nada. Nothing.
Some folks are smart and buy separate flood insurance through the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP). But here’s the kicker: NFIP policies will fix your house, but they won’t pay for your hotel bills. That’s right – you get your home repaired, but you’re on your own for living expenses.
There is one exception: If your regular homeowners policy actually includes flood coverage (which is rare but not impossible), it will probably pay for additional living expenses.
Your Weekend Mission: Find Out What You’ve Got
Step One: Play Detective With Your Policy Time to dig through that stack of insurance papers you’ve been avoiding. Look for anything that mentions “additional living expenses” or “loss of use.” These are your magic phrases.
Step Two: Make The Call That Matters Call your insurance agent or company and ask them directly:
- Do I have flood coverage in my homeowners policy?
- Do I have a separate NFIP flood policy?
- What does my policy say about additional living expenses?
Don’t be shy about asking. These are perfectly reasonable questions, and they should give you straight answers.
What This Means for Your Bank Account
If your regular homeowners policy covers the damage to your house, you’re probably looking at getting reimbursed for reasonable living expenses. We’re talking hotel bills, restaurant meals (within reason), laundry costs, and other necessities.
If you only have NFIP flood coverage, you’ll get your house fixed but you’re paying for hotels and meals out of your own pocket.
Your Next Move: Get Answers This Weekend
Don’t spend another night wondering if you’re covered. Make that phone call to your insurance company and find out exactly what your policy includes. Knowledge is power, and right now, you need all the power you can get.
The worst thing you can do is assume you’re not covered and not file a claim. The best thing you can do is find out for sure and start the process if you’re eligible.
Ready to find out if your insurance company is about to become your new best friend? Grab your policy, make that call, and get the answers you deserve. Your wallet will thank you.




