Would you buy insurance for your livestock and equipment?

BRS

Would you buy insurance for your livestock and equipment?

  • Yes

    Votes: 19 37.3%
  • No

    Votes: 15 29.4%
  • Maybe

    Votes: 17 33.3%
  • Other (please explain in the thread)

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    51

revhtree

Owner Administrator
Review score
+3 /0 /-0
View Badges
Joined
May 8, 2006
Messages
46,522
Reaction score
81,880
Review score
+3 /0 /-0
Rating - 100%
1   0   1
This is COMPLETELY HYPOTHETICAL and I’m only asking for the fun of it and to see what you would say.

If there was a company that could provide you insurance for livestock and equipment would you buy some insurance?

If so how much would you be willing to pay?

Again this is all in fun!
 
OP
revhtree

revhtree

Owner Administrator
Review score
+3 /0 /-0
View Badges
Joined
May 8, 2006
Messages
46,522
Reaction score
81,880
Review score
+3 /0 /-0
Rating - 100%
1   0   1
I would and would pay up to $50 a month as long as the deductible was fair.
 

o2manyfish

Valuable Member
Review score
+0 /0 /-0
View Badges
Joined
Jul 19, 2012
Messages
1,216
Reaction score
2,468
Review score
+0 /0 /-0
Location
Encino, CA
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Back in the late 80's I was just starting to build custom aquariums and I built one for a very successful cardiologist.

We got the insurance to pay for 'reasonable' salt water tank installations for people with Hypertension - as stress relief.

We also used to be able to insure the livestock under the category of 'Art Work' and were able to make successful claims for the livestock when a system crashed.

That all unwound in the early 90's when insurance companies picked up on not insuring livestock.

Dave B
 

affan

New Member
Review score
+0 /0 /-0
View Badges
Joined
Dec 24, 2022
Messages
9
Reaction score
3
Review score
+0 /0 /-0
Location
Uk
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
This is COMPLETELY HYPOTHETICAL and I’m only asking for the fun of it and to see what you would say.

If there was a company that could provide you insurance for livestock and equipment would you buy some insurance?

If so how much would you be willing to pay?

Again this is all in fun!
No, Already paying so much in insurance lol :D
 

acesfull44

Valuable Member
Review score
+1 /0 /-0
View Badges
Joined
Jan 21, 2015
Messages
1,584
Reaction score
3,170
Review score
+1 /0 /-0
Location
St. Louis
Rating - 100%
1   0   0
Depending on the specific coverage and deductible I would absolutely consider it. Given the amount of time, energy and money we spend on this hobby it seems like a "no brainer."
 

Tamberav

7500 Club Member
Review score
+0 /0 /-0
View Badges
Joined
Jul 4, 2014
Messages
9,546
Reaction score
14,561
Review score
+0 /0 /-0
Location
Wauwatosa, WI
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
They would just try and get out of paying up. Lots of fine print to not cover this and that and items like lights all written off as water damage. You could probably get coverage for catastrophic events like house burning down or something.
 

lynn.reef.nerd

Well-Known Member
Review score
+4 /0 /-0
View Badges
Joined
Apr 20, 2019
Messages
944
Reaction score
1,398
Review score
+4 /0 /-0
Location
Maryland
Rating - 100%
3   0   0
Depending on the fine prints. what would they cover? Accidental cause (i.e. heater going out)? Mother nature (a storm)? Negligence?

even with homeowners insurance, as we fond out, will not cover faulty installation. We had a major storm and our roof was damaged. Insurance will not cover the cost to replace becasue the last homeowner installed it incorrectly.

If the insurance covers everything I would get it if the cost per year is at most 5% of the value of the system.
 

thatmanMIKEson

Reefing ain't easy$
Review score
+0 /0 /-0
View Badges
Joined
Jan 10, 2021
Messages
4,293
Reaction score
4,107
Review score
+0 /0 /-0
Location
florida
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
This is COMPLETELY HYPOTHETICAL and I’m only asking for the fun of it and to see what you would say.

If there was a company that could provide you insurance for livestock and equipment would you buy some insurance?

If so how much would you be willing to pay?

Again this is all in fun!
I didn't even read fully but yes, what's the deductible for full coverage?
 

mike550

Valuable Member
Review score
+0 /0 /-0
View Badges
Joined
Oct 13, 2019
Messages
2,084
Reaction score
2,232
Review score
+0 /0 /-0
Location
Chicago
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
This is COMPLETELY HYPOTHETICAL and I’m only asking for the fun of it and to see what you would say.

If there was a company that could provide you insurance for livestock and equipment would you buy some insurance?

If so how much would you be willing to pay?

Again this is all in fun!
I’m sure that someone offers this insurance already since it’s yet another way for insurance companies to make money (cynic here). I think the hardest thing to do is define what loss is covered. A tank breaking is obvious. But what if it’s a light that stops working after five years or a fish that dies from disease / neglect of the owner. This is what would make insurance expensive.

Personally, I’m more concerned about water damage to my home if the tank bursts more than anything else.
 

YOYOYOReefer

Well-Known Member
Review score
+0 /0 /-0
View Badges
Joined
Dec 9, 2021
Messages
850
Reaction score
597
Review score
+0 /0 /-0
Location
bloomington il
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Prepaying is the best tank insurance, Constant power, Ozone, UV, huge skimmers, auto top off, radions, calcium reactor , etc, etc Thats what insures your tank inhabitants.

my homeowners covers the physical goods, but nobody insures your fish , not even aquarium stores can find that type of coverage at anything. We have solar and my tank can run 20-30 days off just its batterys if needed (but the batterys charge every day). I also store about 1500 gallons of RO/DI (my tanks and lagoon total about 6500 gallons) so i have plenty on hand for ato/water changes all my systems run multiple heaters/pumps and have ranco's on them
 

thepotoo

Active Member
Review score
+1 /0 /-0
View Badges
Joined
Aug 27, 2019
Messages
111
Reaction score
150
Review score
+1 /0 /-0
Location
Vermont
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I would absolutely not pay for insurance on my tank - any time you are paying for insurance, your premiums are covering the cost of the insurance company running their business.

Oh, and if you're a skilled reefer, your premiums would be subsidizing not only the insurance company, but reefers who are less skilled.

Insurance only makes sense if you can't eat the loss - for example, health insurance prevents you from going bankrupt if you break an arm, home owners insurance covers you if your house burns down, etc. If the loss won't financially ruin you, don't buy insurance -- put whatever the premiums would be in an SP500 index fund instead. That's a much better return, statistically speaking.
 

JZ199

Well-Known Member
Review score
+0 /0 /-0
View Badges
Joined
Apr 16, 2014
Messages
891
Reaction score
5,832
Review score
+0 /0 /-0
Location
Northeast Pennsylvania
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
It depends on a lot of different things, mainly what the deductible would be, and what all was covered.

If I could pay 20 or 30 a month to cover my equipment and corals I would consider it if I only had to pay like 5 or 10 dollars to cover a burnt up pump or light, or replace a nice coral... If I had to pay that monthly and still have to pay like 100 for a deductible then no way lol
 

Jim Gomoll

Active Member
Review score
+0 /0 /-0
View Badges
Joined
May 11, 2022
Messages
113
Reaction score
172
Review score
+0 /0 /-0
Location
Genoa City
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
It depends on a lot of different things, mainly what the deductible would be, and what all was covered.

If I could pay 20 or 30 a month to cover my equipment and corals I would consider it if I only had to pay like 5 or 10 dollars to cover a burnt up pump or light, or replace a nice coral... If I had to pay that monthly and still have to pay like 100 for a deductible then no way lol
I'm in same boat on this reply. Allot of depends...

Side note on Home Owners ins.
Recently saw a YouTube review comparing brand name canister filters vs cheaper knock offs. Brand name reef hardware are higher priced due to the UL electrical certification. (Ins. covered) If you go with a cheap knockoff component and burn up your system, possibly house your SOL /not covered by HO insurance without UL certification.
 
BRS

What size was your first aquarium?

  • 10 gallons or less

    Votes: 94 21.6%
  • 11-29 gallons

    Votes: 126 28.9%
  • 30-54 gallons

    Votes: 90 20.6%
  • 55-90 gallons

    Votes: 88 20.2%
  • 91-149 gallons

    Votes: 22 5.0%
  • 150-299 gallons

    Votes: 16 3.7%
  • 300 gallons or more

    Votes: 0 0.0%
Innovative Marine - Made to Order
Back
Top