What Does Homeowners Insurance Cover?

A standard homeowners policy (HO-3) covers six things: the structure of your home, other structures, your belongings, your liability, guests’ medical bills, and living costs if you’re displaced — against sudden, accidental perils. It does not cover floods, earthquakes, neglect, wear, or pests.

By the Home & Dime Editorial Team · Updated 2026 · 9 min read

Homeowners insurance is the single most important financial protection for most families — yet most people don’t know what it actually covers until they file a claim. This guide breaks down all six coverages, the exclusions that surprise people, how claims really work, and how to make sure you’re not underinsured.

The 6 coverages in every standard policy

1. Dwelling coverage (Coverage A)

Pays to repair or rebuild the physical structure of your home — walls, roof, floors, built-in appliances, and attached structures like a garage — when a covered peril damages them. Your dwelling limit should equal your home’s replacement cost (what it costs to rebuild), not its market value or purchase price.

2. Other structures (Coverage B)

Covers structures not attached to your house: a detached garage, shed, fence, or gazebo. Typically set at about 10% of your dwelling limit. See detached garage and shed coverage.

3. Personal property (Coverage C)

Covers your belongings — furniture, electronics, clothing — usually at 50–70% of your dwelling limit, even away from home. High-value items like jewelry and collectibles have sub-limits and may need a scheduled rider.

4. Loss of use (Coverage D)

If a covered event makes your home unlivable, this pays for hotels, meals, and other extra living costs. Learn more in loss of use coverage.

5. Personal liability (Coverage E)

Protects you if someone is injured on your property or you damage someone else’s property — covering legal costs and settlements, commonly $100,000–$500,000. See personal liability coverage.

6. Medical payments (Coverage F)

Pays small guest medical bills regardless of fault — usually $1,000–$5,000. See medical payments coverage.

Common misconceptions

What homeowners insurance does NOT do

  • It does not cover floods — you need separate flood insurance, even for a burst-levee or storm surge.
  • It does not cover home maintenance, wear and tear, or an aging roof.
  • It does not pay market value — it pays replacement cost (or actual cash value on ACV policies).
  • It does not automatically cover a home-based business or a rental (that needs landlord insurance).

Frequently overlooked exclusions

Gaps people discover at claim time

  • Earthquakes and earth movement (needs an endorsement).
  • Sewer and drain backups — add water-backup coverage.
  • Mold beyond a low sub-limit unless a covered peril caused it — see mold coverage.
  • Termites and pests, considered preventable maintenance.

State-specific differences

Coverage basics are similar nationwide, but details vary sharply by state. Coastal states (Florida, Louisiana, Texas) often apply separate hurricane and wind deductibles and may exclude wind entirely in some areas. Tornado-belt states use percentage-based wind/hail deductibles. California and the Pacific Northwest carry significant earthquake risk requiring separate coverage. Find your state in our state insurance guides.

How to file a homeowners claim (step by step)

Claim process

  • Ensure safety and stop ongoing damage (shut off water, etc.).
  • Document everything with photos and video before cleanup.
  • Prevent further damage (tarp the roof, dry the area) and keep receipts.
  • Contact your insurer promptly to open the claim.
  • Meet the adjuster and provide your own independent repair estimates.
  • Review the settlement carefully before accepting.

For the full walkthrough, see how to file a homeowners insurance claim and how to dispute a denial.

Documentation checklist

Keep these ready

  • A room-by-room home inventory with photos.
  • Receipts or appraisals for high-value items.
  • Your policy declarations page and deductible amounts.
  • Dated photos of any damage and its cause.
  • A log of all communication with your insurer.

A real-world example

A winter storm freezes a pipe that bursts overnight, flooding a finished basement. Homeowners insurance covers the water damage to walls, flooring, and belongings (minus the deductible), plus loss of use if the family must relocate during repairs. It would not pay to replace the worn pipe itself, and if the same basement flooded from rising groundwater, only flood insurance would respond.

Cost considerations

Premiums depend on your home’s rebuild cost, location and risk, claims history, deductible, and coverage limits. Raising your deductible lowers your premium — estimate the trade-off with our deductible calculator and premium estimator. Choosing replacement cost over ACV costs a little more but pays far more at claim time.

Preventive maintenance tips

Reduce claims (and denials)

  • Inspect and maintain your roof; document its condition.
  • Keep the home heated in winter to prevent frozen pipes.
  • Service your HVAC and water heater regularly.
  • Trim trees near the house and clear gutters.
  • Add smoke detectors, water sensors, and a security system for discounts.

Related coverage options

Fill the gaps

About this guide

Written by the Home & Dime Editorial Team. Reviewed for accuracy against Insurance Information Institute (III), Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), FEMA, and state Department of Insurance guidance. Last reviewed: 2026. We update this guide whenever coverage rules change.

Frequently asked questions

How much homeowners insurance do I need?

Enough dwelling coverage to fully rebuild your home at today’s costs, plus liability that protects your assets. Don’t base it on your mortgage or market value.

Does homeowners insurance cover water damage?

Only sudden, accidental water damage like a burst pipe. Flooding, sewer backups, and gradual leaks are excluded unless endorsed. See water damage coverage.

What’s the difference between replacement cost and actual cash value?

Replacement cost pays to replace items new; ACV deducts depreciation. See ACV vs replacement cost.

Will filing a claim raise my rates?

Often, especially water-damage and liability claims. See does filing a claim raise rates.

Is homeowners insurance required?

Not by law, but mortgage lenders require it.

Related guides

Sources: Insurance Information Institute (iii.org); Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (consumerfinance.gov); FEMA (floodsmart.gov); state Departments of Insurance. This guide is general information, not personalized insurance advice.

Complete Homeowners Insurance guide

Every homeowners insurance question we’ve answered, in one place:

Insurance by state

Coverage rules, risks, and costs vary by state. Find your state guide:

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Independent guides to the largest U.S. insurance companies:

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