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A homeowner in Tampa has a homeowner's insurance policy with a $2,500 hurricane deductible. After Hurricane Debby causes $15,000 in covered damage to their roof, the insurance company pays $12,500. Three weeks later, Hurricane Elsa causes an additional $8,000 in covered damage. How much will the insurance company pay for the second hurricane under Florida law?

Correct Answer

A) $5,500 (after applying the full deductible again)

Under Florida law, hurricane deductibles typically apply per occurrence, meaning each separate hurricane event triggers a new deductible. Therefore, the second hurricane damage of $8,000 minus the $2,500 deductible equals $5,500 that the insurance company will pay. Option B ($8,000 with no deductible) is incorrect as each hurricane is a separate occurrence. Option C ($6,000 with reduced deductible) is incorrect as there's no provision for reduced deductibles on subsequent storms. Option D ($0 payment) is incorrect as deductibles don't have annual limits that excuse future deductibles.

Answer Options
A
$5,500 (after applying the full deductible again)
B
$8,000 (no additional deductible applies)
C
$6,000 (after applying a reduced deductible)
D
$0 (the annual hurricane deductible has been met)

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Related Topics & Key Terms

Key Terms:

hurricane_deductiblemultiple_hurricanesper_occurrence
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