Your particular insurance needs depend, in part, on who you live with and your relationship to them. Most changes to your relationship status will warrant an insurance policy update.
If you don’t update that information, your insurance company may have incomplete information about who’s sharing your home or your car, and you may have too little or too much coverage.
Insurance Needs for Single or Single with Roommates
Whether you rent or own, whether you live alone or with roommates, you should have an insurance policy to cover your home and possessions, as well as the necessary car insurance. Your guests, your roommates, and their guests can all cause damage to your home or car (and so can you, for that matter).
Car Insurance
If you’re living with roommates, your insurance company may want you to add your roommates to your car insurance policy, just in case they drive your car and end up in a crash. Be sure to check with your insurance company. The last thing you want is for your roommate to cause damage to your car that your insurance won’t cover.
If you’re renting, the person on the lease typically purchases the renters insurance. If both your names are on the lease, you’ll need separate renters insurance policies. Most insurance companies will not write one policy for unrelated friends.
Home Insurance
If one name isn’t on the lease and that person doesn’t have a policy, the possessions they keep in the home are likely still covered by the policyholder’s insurer.
Yet, any possessions lost, destroyed or damaged outside of the home may not be covered . If this person’s phone is stolen while they’re out, for instance, it wouldn’t be covered.
To have the off-premises possessions covered, the policy-holder would have to buy an insurance endorsement to provide their roommate with off-premises possessions and liability protection.
If one person has bought a place and the other roommates are paying rent to them – think Blanche and the other Golden Girls – the owner should get a homeowners insurance or condo insurance policy and the renters should each get a renters insurance policy.
Insurance Coverage for Unmarried Partners
Nearly every state requires insurance companies to recognize and provide coverage to domestic partnerships, but whether you need to register officially as domestic partners depends on the insurance company. Each insurance company might require something different to confirm the domestic partnership. If you or your significant other are not domestic partners, you may need to buy separate insurance policies, the way roommates would.
Car Insurance
Sharing your home with someone doesn’t necessarily mean that you are sharing your car with that person; but if you are, you’ll need to update your car insurance.
You should discuss your driving record with your partner. If one of you has a bad driving record, their premiums could be higher. For this reason, the two of you may want to keep your auto insurance policies separate. But, you might be eligible for a discount if you combine your car insurance policies into one.
Home Insurance
If you are cohabitating and registered as domestic partners, it’s required to have both names on the home insurance.