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Are You Covered?
  • Auto and Home Insurance for Unmarried Couples
    Sixty years ago, when the 1950 census data was released, it showed that eight in 10 households were occupied by married couples. Fifty years later, the 2000 census data showed that number had declined to just over 50%, signifying a sea change in the typical American household. Almost half of households were occupied by a single individual, roommates or unmarried couples (the 2010 census data is still in the process of being made public).
  • What to do Before, During and After Thunderstorms
    Before, During and After a Thunderstorm.
  • What You Need to Know About Shady Home Contractors, Remodeling & Hiring Day Laborers
    Ah, summertime, and the living is easy. Perfect for sitting in the shade out back with a cold drink. You may even decide this is the perfect time to finally add that deck, enlarge the patio for cookouts, or put in that new landscaping with a couple of strategically placed trees perfect for a comfortable hammock.
  • What Everyone Should Know About Insuring Property in Storage
    The other day while flipping through the channels I stumbled upon a reality show about people who bid on items in abandoned storage units- sometimes finding items valued in the tens of thousands of dollars. I thought of my family and friends who had storage units and the kinds of items they kept in there- and it ran the gamut from golf clubs to furniture to ski equipment.  According to the Self Storage Association, 10.8 million people in the US rent a self-storage unit. If you’re one of those 10.8 million people you should ask yourself, do I have insurance coverage for my property in storage?
  • Insuring Your Happily Ever After
    Getting married and embarking on a new life together is one of the most exciting experiences in two people’s lives. It’s a time of hope, promise, romance and … reality. Whether a couple is planning their wedding or deciding where to live, there are a lot of decisions to make before saying “I do,” especially when it comes to insurance.
  • Changing Your Address Means Changing Your Insurance
    May is National Moving Month and every year more than 40 million Americans will move, according to the American Moving and Storage Association. As you pack up your belongings and move across town or across the country, make sure you don’t forget to “pack” your insurance coverage.
  • Spring Forward: Spring Cleaning and Safety Updates
    Temperatures are getting warmer and now that it’s spring, it’s time for spring cleaning and making spring time repairs around the house. Taking care of our homes is important, so take a moment to understand how taking care of things around the house can impact your insurance.
  • A Little Less than Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious: Insurance and Tax Issues with Nannies and Housekeepers
    With more and more families every year having both parents work full time, there has been an increasing need for help around the house with childcare and chores like cleaning, laundry and running errands. If you’re hiring household help it’s important to understand how having domestic workers (including nannies, housekeepers, caretakers, etc.) around your home can impact not only your insurance coverage- both your auto and your homeowners- but also how it could have tax implications for you. If you don’t understand these issues, the result could be something quite atrocious.
  • Congratulations Class of 2013: Now It’s Time to Graduate to Your Own Insurance!
    While every individual has unique needs, here are a few  insurance coverage options that all college grads should consider.
  • Summer Storm Recovery Tips
    Independent insurance agents not only advise clients about insurance, but they’re disaster readiness consultants. It is imperative to know what your risks are and what to do in the
    event of a hurricane. We recommend meeting with a Trusted Choice® independent insurance agent who can consult with you in assessing your risks and ensuring that you, your family and your home are prepared in the event of a disaster. Trusted Choice® offers many disaster-specific readiness and recovery tips for consumers.
  • Be Prepared for a Disaster
    Independent insurance agents not only advise clients about insurance, but they’re disaster readiness consultants. It is imperative to know what your risks are and what to do in the
    event of any natural disaster. We recommend meeting with a Trusted Choice® independent insurance agent who can consult with you in assessing your risks and ensuring that you, your family and your home are prepared in the event of a disaster. Trusted Choice® offers many disaster-specific readiness and recovery tips for consumers.
  • New Development, New Flood Risk
    One factor to consider when evaluating your risk of flooding is development and new construction in your area.
  • Landscape Ready: Utility Marking, Underground Septic & Sewer Back-Up
    Homeowners: Before you hit a gusher—and we aren't talking oil—get the 811 from Trusted Choice.
  • Avoid a Bracket Busting Claim: Insuring Special Events
    It’s time for March Madness! Are you planning a blowout that will make render an entirely new meaning to “bracket busting?” Has your neighborhood community center asked for a either a hold-harmless agreement or a damage deposit exceeding your current mortgage payment?

    Welcome to the world of personal event risk management!
  • Earth Day and Going “Green” with Your Homeowners Insurance
    "I recognize the right and duty of this generation to develop and use the natural resources of our land; but I do not recognize the right to waste them, or to rob, by wasteful use, the generations that come after us." – Theodore Roosevelt
    With Earth Day on April 22nd, Roosevelt’s call for responsible use of resources remains as relevant today as when he wrote it over a century ago, and many Americans are taking up the call as part of the “green” movement, particularly in the areas of construction and building. Whether you’re building a new home or are interested in retrofitting your home to be a “green” home, it’s important to recognize how taking these steps to make your home more environmentally friendly may require some special “green” insurance to protect them.
Counting Down to College? Be Sure Insurance Still Adds Up
college.jpgAs sure as the swallows return to Capistrano, all over America the latest migration of students prepares to descend on college campuses. Depending on whether your student is facing year one or is farther along the higher education highway, their individual stress levels may range from sheer terror to borderline boredom. For you, concerns may be running the gamut from empty nest issues to “How are we going to pay for this?”
            
Not that we want to add any wood to the mental and emotional fires, but college-bound season is also the perfect time to schedule a session with your Trusted Choice® independent insurance agent.
 
College raises a plethora of insurance issues that are far better addressed prior to departure than after. Here are just a few questions to consider:
  • How will your home insurance cover a personal property loss at college? While in your day packing for school may have meant a few boxes and one large suitcase, moving day on today’s campuses typically involves trucks and trailers. How much will your student be carting off to his or her dorm or apartment? Will it be properly covered for such losses as theft or fire under your current coverage or will adequate coverage require endorsements or even a separate policy?
  • Will your student be taking a car to college? If so, who owns it? Where will it be garaged? Who will be driving it? Should you change the location address for that vehicle on your current policy to the school location? What affect on your current policy will such a change have—good, bad or indifferent? If your student has roommates with cars, how will your current auto policy work if there is an accident while they are using your student’s car? Or when your student is using their cars?
  • Will your student be living on or off campus? In a dorm, apartment or rented house? All of these variables, especially for older students, can have an impact on your current protection and dictate a need for modifying your policy or purchasing a new one. For many insurance companies, there are also underwriting and coverage considerations based upon how many roommates will share your student’s humble abode.
  • What about liability protection? Yours as well as that of your student? There are a multitude of liability issues that may arise from a family member living elsewhere. Some are common to any such arrangement; others are unique to college students and their parents. Even for students who are otherwise of legally independent age, when can parents still face liability for the student’s actions while away?
  • How will your current health insurance apply at college? Will there be “in-network” professionals and facilities available locally? Does the college have its own infirmary, pharmacy or hospital facilities, and will your current plan cover their services? Are there student insurance plans available, especially for certain activities such as organized sports—and is it advisable to take advantage of them, regardless of your current coverage? Are there eligibility issues to keep in mind, especially if your student is older, is disabled, gets a full-time job or gets married?
 
The good news is these are not isolated issues, but simply questions faced by every parent and student as the college years begin. The great news is they also are handled regularly by your Trusted Choice agent, and he or she will be happy to sit down with you and your student to provide answers, advice and options. You may discover your current coverages respond to all or the vast majority of your concerns, and little need be done. If action is needed to assure your current protection will be there at time of need, you and your agent can make those choices at the best possible time—now, before that need arises.
 
Congratulations to your and your student as you together pursue a great future! It will be a rewarding, but sometimes wild ride! Be sure to take your Trusted Choice agent along.

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127 South Peyton Street
Alexandria, VA 22314
Phone: 800.221.7917
Fax: 703.683.7556
Email: Trusted.Choice@iiaba.net