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Got some experience on this. National Flood Insurance is cheap. I had a house on a canal that lead into the bay. My house was 7' above MSL. My yearly premium was only $178 per year. Yes, $178! Why so cheap? Taxpayer subsidized.
The insurance adjusters are going to try to determine how much of the damage is attributed to rising water, versus how much is caused by wind and wind driven rain. So, if your house is covered in 20' of water caused by storm surge or other rising waters, but is otherwise undamaged and you have flood insurance, your entire house would probably be covered under the flood policy. Your normal homeowners policy wouldn't pay anything, unless you have coverage for contents or outside structures, pools, etc.
If your house is under 20' of water and you have no flood insurance, you're screwed! Should have spent the $200.
If your roof in ripped off and rainwater destroyed the inside of the house, your homeowners policy will cover it.
Here's where it gets tricky. If you lose the roof AND flood waters enter your house, STFB. If you only have homeowners, they'll offer to fix you roof, but blame all other interior damage on floodwaters, even if you only had 1" of water in the house. If you have homeowners and flood, then the two policy issuers will spend about a year denying and pointing fingers at each other, while your house sit vacant and damaged. You're forced to get a lawyer, who is going to take half your settlement.
Then when you do get money, your mortgage company is going to hold onto the purse, forcing you to beg for your own money in order to make repairs. Why? Because some dumbass long ago took his insurance settlement to Vegas and blew it and the mortgage company was left with a destroyed house and an unpaid loan.
So, you've got many ways to get screwed when a hurricane hits your area.
Luckily for me, I moved off the water three years ago. But, because I'm in the construction industry, I heard these stories ad nausium for a year.
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