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What Type Of Water Damage Is Covered By Homeowners Insurance?
Water damage is the second most frequently filed homeowners insurance claim in the United States, behind only wind and hail. The Insurance...
Homeowners insurance is structured as an exclusion-based policy: it covers everything except what is specifically excluded. The exclusions are where most homeowners get surprised at claim time. Knowing exactly what your policy will not pay for, before you have a claim, is one of the highest leverage things an Illinois homeowner can do, because most of the major exclusions can be closed with the right endorsement, separate policy, or limit increase if you address them in advance.
This guide breaks down the eight major exclusions in a standard Illinois homeowners policy, the hidden sublimits that function like exclusions even when they are not labeled that way, the property-type and liability-type carve-outs that catch most homeowners off guard, and the specific endorsements and separate policies that close each gap.
The biggest single exclusion in every standard homeowners policy in the United States is flood damage from external sources. Surface water entering the home from overflowing rivers, storm surge, surface runoff, or saturated ground is excluded entirely. In Illinois, flooding causes more than 90 percent of declared disasters and roughly $700 million in annual property damage, which makes this the most consequential coverage gap for Illinois homeowners.
How to close the gap: Purchase a separate flood insurance policy, either through the FEMA National Flood Insurance Program or through a private flood insurer. Lenders require flood insurance if your home sits in a FEMA-designated Special Flood Hazard Area. Even outside of high-risk zones, flood insurance is often worth the cost given that more than 25 percent of NFIP claims come from properties outside designated flood zones.
Damage from earthquakes, sinkholes, landslides, mudflows, and other ground movement is excluded from standard homeowners policies. Illinois is not as earthquake-prone as the West Coast, but the New Madrid Seismic Zone in southern Illinois carries meaningful exposure for homes south of I-80, and isolated quakes have been felt as far north as Chicago.
How to close the gap: Earthquake coverage is available as an endorsement or standalone policy at modest cost for most Illinois homes. For homes within 100 miles of the New Madrid Seismic Zone, earthquake coverage is worth a closer look at renewal.
Water that backs up through sewer lines, drains, sump pumps, or floor drains is excluded from the base homeowners policy. For older Illinois homes, particularly those in Chicago and the close-in suburbs with combined storm and sanitary sewer systems, this is one of the most common claim scenarios that surprises homeowners.
How to close the gap: The Water Backup of Sewers and Drains endorsement typically costs $40 to $100 per year and provides $5,000 to $25,000 in coverage. For homes with finished basements, it is essentially mandatory. Detailed treatment in our guide to water damage coverage.
Damage that results from gradual deterioration, age, or failure to maintain the home is excluded. Aged roofing materials that finally let water in, corroded plumbing that slowly leaks for months, foundation cracks from settling, and other gradual issues are treated as homeowner responsibility, not insured perils. The carrier's standard for "gradual" is often a 14-day rule: damage that has been occurring continuously for 14 days or more before discovery is typically denied.
How to close the gap: There is no insurance endorsement that converts maintenance issues into covered claims. The only protection is proactive home maintenance and early detection (water leak sensors, annual HVAC and plumbing inspections, replacing washing machine hoses every 5 to 7 years, replacing water heaters at 10 to 12 years).
Mold growth that follows a covered water damage event is typically covered, but most Illinois homeowners policies cap mold coverage at $5,000 to $10,000, with separate caps for remediation. Mold from gradual leaks, humidity, or maintenance issues is excluded entirely. Given that mold can begin growing within 48 hours of water exposure and remediation costs can run $10,000 to $30,000 for a moderate event, the standard sublimit is often inadequate.
How to close the gap: Most carriers offer increased mold sublimit endorsements at modest premium. For any home with a finished basement, history of moisture issues, or significant HVAC complexity, this is one of the smartest renewal upgrades available.
Damage caused by termites, carpenter ants, rodents, raccoons, squirrels, birds, and similar pests is excluded as a maintenance issue. This includes both the gradual structural damage these pests cause and the cleanup of contamination they create.
How to close the gap: No insurance endorsement covers pest damage. Annual pest inspections, especially for termites in southern and central Illinois, are the only protection.
Standard homeowners policies exclude damage from acts of war (declared or undeclared), nuclear reaction or contamination, and damage caused by government action including the seizure or destruction of property by civil authority. These exclusions rarely matter in practice but exist in every modern policy.
Damage that the homeowner causes intentionally is excluded entirely. Insurance is designed to respond to unexpected events, not deliberate destruction.
Even when a category of property is technically covered, most homeowners policies impose strict sublimits that effectively exclude high-value items unless they are scheduled separately. The typical default sublimits in a standard Illinois HO-3 policy include:
How to close the gap: Schedule individual high-value items on a Personal Articles or Scheduled Items endorsement. Scheduling typically requires an appraisal and adds $5 to $20 per $1,000 of coverage per year for jewelry, with lower rates for other categories. Scheduled items are usually covered on an open perils basis including mysterious disappearance, which closes another common gap.
Beyond the main exclusions, several property-type situations either reduce or eliminate coverage under a standard homeowners policy:
Most homeowners policies restrict coverage when the home is vacant for more than 30 to 60 consecutive days. Water damage, vandalism, and theft claims on vacant homes are frequently denied or significantly reduced. This affects snowbirds, homes on the market, and inherited properties.
How to close the gap: A vacant dwelling policy or unoccupied home endorsement provides specific coverage for these situations. Required for any property expected to be empty more than 60 days.
Standard homeowners policies provide limited coverage for business property (typically $2,500) and almost no liability coverage for business activities conducted from the home. A home-based business, a side hustle that generates client visits, or a short-term rental operation can all create uncovered claim scenarios.
How to close the gap: A home-based business endorsement or separate business owners policy. For short-term rental hosts (Airbnb, VRBO), a dedicated short-term rental endorsement or a habitational policy is essential. Airbnb's host protection program is not a substitute for proper coverage.
A homeowners policy on your primary residence does not extend to a second home, vacation property, or rental property. Each property requires its own policy, and rental properties specifically need a dwelling fire (DP-3) or landlord policy, not a homeowners policy.
Damage to vehicles, boats, motorcycles, and aircraft is excluded from homeowners coverage. These require their own dedicated insurance policies. Limited coverage for boats under 25 horsepower and on-premises only is sometimes included, but anything beyond that requires separate coverage.
The personal liability section of a homeowners policy is broad but has important exclusions:
How to close gaps in liability coverage: A personal umbrella policy layers $1 million to $5 million of excess liability above the underlying homeowners and auto liability limits. For households with assets above $300,000, teenage drivers, swimming pools, dogs, or any of the elevated-risk profiles above, umbrella coverage is one of the most cost-effective insurance products available.
Two Illinois-specific points deserve attention when reviewing what is and is not covered by your homeowners policy:
Illinois homeowners insurance currently averages $2,100 to $3,100 per year depending on dwelling coverage, age of home, and credit-based insurance score, with rates having climbed roughly 50 percent between 2021 and 2024. The endorsements discussed in this guide typically add $50 to $300 per year combined, which is usually less than the cost of a single uncovered claim. For a deeper breakdown of pricing factors, see our guide to factors affecting Illinois homeowners insurance costs and our companion analysis of cheap home insurance in Kane County.
Pro Insurance Group works with Illinois homeowners to structure homeowners coverage that addresses the actual exposures most homes face, including the endorsements that close the most common gaps in base policies. Our personal lines team quotes across 20 plus top-rated carriers and structures auto, home, and umbrella together so homeowners across Kane County and McHenry County get the right coverage at the right price.
Call our personal lines team at 833-776-4671, learn more about our homeowners insurance program, see our guides to first-time homebuyer coverage and water damage coverage, or request a quote for your home today.
About the author: Dave Rysavy is a Personal Lines Advisor at Pro Insurance Group, specializing in homeowners, auto, and personal umbrella coverage for households across Kane, McHenry, DuPage, and Cook counties in Illinois. Dave helps homeowners identify and close the most common gaps in standard homeowners policies through the right combination of endorsements, separate policies, and umbrella coverage. Reach Dave through the Pro Insurance Group office at 833-776-4671.
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