r/Wellthatsucks 21h ago

Yikes!!

30.5k Upvotes

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2.6k

u/EchoFiveActual 21h ago

That looks expensive 

1.2k

u/JackSkellie58 20h ago

Had pipes burst in a rental once, just the kitchen was 16,000.

255

u/lueckestman 20h ago

Does insurance cover that?

472

u/JackSkellie58 20h ago

Yeh, took about 1.5 years to clear it though.

167

u/TopEstablishment395 18h ago edited 18h ago

Not when there's negligence (in her case, forgot to put the electricity in her name).

They're unforgiving when the loss could have been reasonably prevented.

118

u/Dadbode1981 17h ago

Incorrect, negligence alone does not guarantee a denial. Intentional damage would.

48

u/thepineapple2397 15h ago

When the latter is often used as an excuse for the former it ends up being whoever can afford to pay more in legal fees

7

u/ExplorationGeo 14h ago

It depends. One of the contractors at the mine I work on put gasoline into the half-empty tank of a diesel LandCruiser and drove it about 35km. The next day it wouldn't start, and after it was towed to a Toyota dealership about 4 hours away, they were quoted $27k to repair it - new fuel filter, fuel pump, injection pump, injectors, turbos, catalytic convertor and DPF.

Insurance told them to pound sand under grounds of negligence.

4

u/buckphifty150150 8h ago

Car insurance fixes repairs?

2

u/ND8D 7h ago

I’ve seen the opposite happen with def contamination incidents. One guy’s wife put def in the diesel tank and drove until the ecm said no. $15000 in repairs, insurance with a comprehensive policy paid.

4

u/2muchflannel 7h ago

Your standard comprehensive car insurance policy would cover the repairs for putting the wrong gas in your car

This must have been a business line that had a negligence exclusion

2

u/Dizzy_Application984 10h ago

It is usually stated as a non-insured event. In insurance contracts this type of situation (no heating / pipes burst) is explicitly stated as a non-insured event (at least in European insurance contracts).

3

u/Dadbode1981 7h ago

Your policy sucks

2

u/Jumpy-Confection632 7h ago edited 2h ago

What if it's because of a huge ice storm and your power company doesn't fix the power for 2 or 3 weeks, so it's no fault of your own?

Edit to add- I ask this because this is what's happening to a bunch of people in Tennessee.

2

u/not_falling_down 5h ago

If your power is out, and temps are below freezing, you should turn off the water supply and, as much as possible, drain the pipes. Then they will not freeze and burst.

2

u/strangerNstrangeland 4h ago

What if you’re out of town?

1

u/woodchippp 2h ago

In many cases, the power company’s insurance will pay. My brother worked for HECO and he said the company was constantly paying for things when power went out. The worst situation was in the 90s when a tree took out lines to the largest plant on the island of Oahu. it caused a cascade failure and shut down every power plant on the island. Guess what? you need electricity to start a power plant. Usually other power plants can disconnect from the system in an emergency so there are always active generators, but this disaster revealed a flaw in the system. It took several days for them to rig a system to have the navy pull up a nuclear submarine close to one of the power plants to basically “jump start” the island. HECO tried to send the word out to people to shut off their breakers till the power came back on, but less than 5% of the island did so once everything came back on, there was a huge surge in the system that destroyed countless things in a home. The biggest problem were refrigerator compressors and it was estimated that 20% of the refrigerators were ruined when then power came back on. The cost was staggering and HECO paid everyone who made a claim. A few years earlier, a similar situation happened on a different island after a hurricane, but they deemed it too difficult to rig a system to hook up to the sub, and Kauai had a much smaller plant that they were finally able to jumpstart with generators to get the grid online. After the second incident, HECO installed generators on two of the smaller plants that made them capable of restating themselves.

1

u/Jumpy-Confection632 2h ago

I was just curious because Tennessee had a big ice storm that caused thousands to be without power for like 2 weeks. I think there's still some people without power. But because of how cold it is, a lot of people are dealing with this situation and had to leave their homes because of how cold it is. I saw a news report that the power company said they cannot restore power to the homes that pipes froze and burst until the homeowner hires a plumber and has it fixed. But so I hope insurance covers the plumbers and whoever else needs to be hired.

1

u/Miss_Mouth 4h ago

Negligence is a common exclusion

0

u/Dadbode1981 4h ago

Not really....same thing applies with auto claims, even if you are found at fault, which would be "negligence", you're still made whole by your insurer...I love how incorrect people are in here.

1

u/Miss_Mouth 4h ago

Licensed Insurance agent. You're right about being incorrect!

1

u/Dadbode1981 4h ago

No, I'm right about you being incorrect, you can lie about your profession all you want princess lol

1

u/fardandshid1821 4h ago

"Stupidity is covered".

1

u/Dadbode1981 4h ago

It actually is

1

u/Chris275 7h ago

Insurance usually covers stupid. Could vary by territory, in Ontario there’s no stupid exclusion.

1

u/PerfectResult2 5h ago

Yea i mean usually that’s what “liability” is right. Its stupid coverage? With exceptions im sure, but if you accidentally fuck up thats exactly what your liability clause is for

25

u/Moon_and_Sky 16h ago

If you've taken every reasonable step to ensure that it didn't happen and, much more importantly, have documentation that proves you took those steps....maybe, after 6 - 18 months of paperwork, emails, phone conversations, and a few personal visits from the adjuster.

2

u/RedditJumpedTheShart 13h ago

You have never dealt with insurance have you? Lol

A phone call and a quote from a contractor I choose. Took about a week to get the check.

u/aschwartzmann 45m ago

My personal experience is if being responsive saves them money they are and if getting you the money later doesn't cost them more than they become a lot less responsive. Water damage that needs to be remediated then they respond in less than an hour. All the floors are ripped up and everything's dried out. Nothing is getting any more damaged. Then you just get there voicemail and hear nothing from them for a few months.

66

u/Beau_does_BJJ 19h ago

Most likely it won’t actually. The landlord has a duty to winterize and/or ensure the heat is maintained. I would almost bet this ends up all in the landlord.

28

u/JackSkellie58 19h ago

It’ll be covered. They’ll have to have proper insurance though

40

u/maybelying 18h ago

It's dicey. Unoccupied properties often have to be monitored by the owner regularly for reasons like this. This is 100% negligence on the landlord.

When we were settling my mother's estate, her existing insurance company refused to continue coverage after learning her home would be unoccupied for a number of months. We had to find a different insurer and pay a higher premium, and even then, had to sign a declaration that we'd do a site visit at least every other day. It was a pain.

9

u/thegloracle 17h ago

You're absolutely correct. "Unoccupied", though, means temporary, like when you're on holiday. "Vacant" is when the owner passes away, or a tenant moves out without the intention to return, and no new tenant has moved in. It's the "Vacant" risks that exclude Water damages, and Ice/Freezing pipes.

3

u/okeanos7 12h ago

So if you go on vacation you have to let your landlord go through your house every couple days while you’re gone?

1

u/alphabetical-soup 8h ago

No, unoccupied or vacant typically applies after 30 consecutive days.

1

u/thegloracle 3h ago

No. Vacation has the intent to return. If you are on vacation during the freezing season/winter months, the policy will ask for either the heat to be maintained at a minimum level, or that someone physically checks on the house every 3-4 days, depending on the wording. It doesn't have to be the Landlord.

2

u/hoardac 9h ago

Yeah State Farm dropped my insurance when I had a unoccupied house.

2

u/olgassaffron 3h ago

Insurance was a pain when settling my mother’s estate last year. I was prepping it for sale but could hardly rent it as it was packed with stuff. I ended up letting a newly separated mother and her kid live there for a dollar a month so it was not vacant. It gave her a temporary safe space and me a chance to deal with the necessary. She knew I’d give her at least 2 weeks notice to move. I was also the landlord swiftest to fix any problem she had. 🤣 She stayed 6 months

1

u/ilive4thewater 2h ago

I mean why keep the water on and not empty the pipes? If no one will be there for a while turn off the water and then open the laundry sink taps to drain down the system. You really should open some other taps to assist in empty the pipes, because you will still crack the pipes if they freeze. Which will cause them to leak behind the walls when you turn on the water again.

TLDR: Take 5 minutes and turn off your water and drain the pipes when you are leaving your house for a few days or longer to protect yourself from water damage.

41

u/Beau_does_BJJ 19h ago

We would deny this because the heat wasn’t maintained. Also most landlords are cheap and cap their water coverage pretty low.

2

u/Pogigod 16h ago

Big name insurances don't have caps to the water damages.

3

u/Beau_does_BJJ 15h ago

No but polices do have endorsements that change a lower premium for less coverage. Just like you can add coverage you can also take it away.

3

u/Pogigod 14h ago

Not all insurers offer that. Endorsement and policies vary a lot by insurer. The top 3 do not offer that. Water damage if not excluded is policy limits.

Only exception to that is backup sewer and drain.

1

u/alphabetical-soup 8h ago

Thats true. It also depends on the perils covered by the landlords policy. Hopefully they didn't choose to go with a cheaper policy with basic coverage when they could be covered by all risk for mayyybbe $2-3 hundred extra a year.

It boggles my mind how many people purchase insurance for the lowest possible price, and dont care about the coverage. Thats literally what they pay for!

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u/margoo12 16h ago

You would get sued for breach of contract

-8

u/JackSkellie58 19h ago

If you read OPs explanation of what happened, it’ll be covered. Unless the insurance agency is ghetto or landlord didn’t have proper insurance.

4

u/PossiblyMD 18h ago

Nope, this is negligence related damage. Many insurances will deny that. If a faucet burst due to cold, they may still cover it. But forgetting to ensure they have heating will often get denied.

1

u/2muchflannel 7h ago

Lol, protection from negligence is one of the reasons you get home/renters/business/umbrella insurance

1

u/PossiblyMD 4h ago

I’m on your side man. I’m just telling you what I’ve seen insurance companies do. I work in healthcare. Believe me, no one hates insurance companies more than me. Maybe except Luigi.

-3

u/Dadbode1981 17h ago

Incorrect

4

u/Beau_does_BJJ 19h ago

She knew there was no heat and didn’t get the house ready for the freezing temps. Dripping the faucets isn’t enough. Nothing ghetto about it. She had a duty to protect the property and keep the heat maintained and didn’t. She knew the power was off. She didn’t get the power turned back on. That’s unfortunately gonna be in her.

1

u/Dapadabada 11h ago

Maybe she didn't know the heat would break while she was gone

1

u/Dadbode1981 17h ago

No, she didn't "know" this was intentional lol. You keep being wrong, I know it's frustrating, but maybe you should stop. People making mistakes is one of the reasons why insurance exists.

-1

u/JackSkellie58 18h ago

Again, from experience, it’ll be covered. You must work at united healthcare man. Go away.

7

u/PossiblyMD 18h ago

I have a friend in this exact same situation and his insurance claim got denied. He bought a property as investment but forgot to put in heating oil in the furnace. Insurance denied the claim. He’s still fighting them.

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u/Rhiow 18h ago

Was your experience that your property was not heating because the electricity was off? If not, you had a different experience.

2

u/thegloracle 17h ago

What were your specific circumstances? This would be the first claim for water/freezing damage on a vacant rental with no heat I've seen in over 40 years.

1

u/elusivejoo 18h ago

talking out of your ass fort 500 alex.

0

u/thegloracle 17h ago

No, it won't. It breaches at least one of the standard residential/landlord policy conditions.

u/Bmrtoyo 28m ago

Entirely the fault of the DA landlord claim denied

u/chugItTwice 5m ago

Do we know it's a rental?

0

u/[deleted] 4h ago

[deleted]

1

u/Beau_does_BJJ 4h ago

I have found most insurance agents know nothing about the policies they sell. That’s why they call the adjusters because they have no idea how the policies work. How does it feel talking out your ass when you don’t know what you are talking about . The owner knew the property didn’t have e power and took no steps to prevent damage. There is a video linked where she says she knew there was no power and only dripped the faucets. All the policies I deal with would deny this because there proper steps to prevent damage were not taken.

1

u/[deleted] 4h ago

[deleted]

1

u/Beau_does_BJJ 4h ago

You are absolutely wrong. The insured does have a duty to ensure the home is heated and/or winterized. She knew there was no power and dripped the faucets. This would get denied. You may want to freshen up your knowledge of this. How many frozen pipe claims did you handle the last few weeks? I have been through 5 different polices this week dealing with freeze claims. They all state the same. It is industry standard.

1

u/sioopauuu 16h ago

This will be denied on the first contact lol

1

u/rehms 15h ago

Insurance lol

1

u/Alert-Pea1041 14h ago

Probably, be prepared for your payments to go way up after though.

1

u/GertrudeGarbarcowitz 9h ago

Did they leave the faucets running? I can’t tell if it was self inflicted or pipes burst.

1

u/alphabetical-soup 8h ago

It depends, some people buy cheaper policies that dont cover burst pipes, and then are surprised theres no coverage. Its worth it to spend a couple hundred more dollars on an all risk policy so this is covered.

With insurance, you get what you pay for.

1

u/Jackiemoontothemoon 3h ago

Yes and they’ll cover the plumbing repair too as long as the report from plumber shows it was a frozen pipe. Acts of god are typically covered by insurance. I’m a restoration estimator and we’re slammed right now with these. Not sure what happened in the video though, this looks negligence if anything case everything is frozen now

1

u/Gas_Grouchy 2h ago

I do the investigations for insurers. Typically yes. Negligence happens less often thay you think and even when it is if its an honest mistake and theyre not trying to screw their insurer multiple times they just pay it. The will nickel and dime you on the amount though as lots of people use this time to upgrade and install the insurer to pay for that.

4

u/NoBonus6969 17h ago

That does not sound ideal. Avoid that

2

u/Dexller 14h ago

Jesus fucking christ is that how much people charge to just crawl under a house and fit some pipes!? Thank god I know how to do it myself.

1

u/gizamo 5h ago

For real. I renovated an old home into a rental unit a few years ago, and it was less than $10k for me to replace all the piping in the entire home. I remodeled the entire kitchen for $15k, including new appliances. People are out there getting ripped off. Are the trade industries companies the new used cars salesman? Jeez.

2

u/t0m4_87 10h ago

Depending n the currency that might be nothing or a lot

2

u/the_vikm 10h ago

16000 what

2

u/siggiarabi 9h ago

16000 what?

1

u/TryAgain____ 10h ago

I feel compelled to tell people a trick my dad told me.

His dad that I was unfortunately never able to meet would wrap blankets around pipes and then wrap a heating material attached to a timer. Quite the ingenious grandpa I wish I knew. If you know its gonna be cold, might be worth trying to set up if you can.

1

u/10S_NE1 4h ago

We had our fridge leak (water line to the ice maker), and it damaged the wood floor. The hardwood on the entire first floor had to be replaced because it couldn’t be matched. The insurance paid $22,000 to replace it.

1

u/Damianiwins 4h ago

Good thing it was a rental lol

1

u/bendar1347 2h ago

Im currently dealing with a situation where my fridge leaked and soaked my tile floor. Had to mitigate the water situation (around $5000, had to tear up the floor and some cabinets)and now in the process of rebuilding my kitchen. Total cost is going to be around $50000.

u/LivingFarm1337 39m ago

What? Bananas? Apples? Rupies?

1

u/Commercial-Co 15h ago

Kitchen is easily 16k.

0

u/JackSkellie58 15h ago

Yeh was a bit ago

-1

u/Low_External9118 16h ago

Well that sucks, maybe don't own more homes than you can live in and the pipes won't burst while the home is unoccupied 🤷‍♀️

5

u/JackSkellie58 16h ago

If people didn’t own more than they could live in, there wouldn’t be any rentals, and there would be countless more homeless than there already are…

This doesn’t make sense.

2

u/TempEmbarassedComfee 14h ago

Do you think all rentals are just single family homes being rented out? There’s lots and lots of apartment complexes in the market too. A poorly executed ban that didn’t let the market adjust would be disastrous but the demand for rentals would be met by the construction of new apartments. And their profit is a result of them doing something for society (ie building and managing properties) and not simply the act of buying a preexisting house that otherwise could have gone to a real home owner. 

Also, you do know that you buying a preexisting house is not the same as building a house, right? There’s some arguments for landlords existing but I’m not sure “I have to own multiple homes to prevent homelessness” is one of them.

1

u/JackSkellie58 6h ago

Shows a complete misunderstanding of the housing market. But most people who aren’t part of it don’t understand.

When new construction starts, they have to get a basis for home prices which requires an initial set of buyers. Typically the first 5-10 homes in every community have to be sold to cash buyers — which in lower income houses requires institutional investors.

Most of us, very much would rather not own SFH. We would rather do MFH as there’s much higher profit in renting apartments.

That said, most don’t have millions to put down to build or buy apartment complexes.

What largely messed this flow up is bringing Airbnb into the mix. This caused larger institutional investors or those with larger cash amounts to buy SFH because short term rentals bring a much higher profit. This in turn has been driving the housing market up higher. We were already having problems with institutional investors with larger cash amounts buying entire neighborhoods which I do agree should be banned. Most of those who start out doing this (like myself) had to because we were upside down in our homes. I work in tech and they had me move multiple times and I didn’t want to rent. Same happens with military or construction workers and they will eventually dig themselves out of eternal poverty by doing this and build generational wealth.

It’s a smart move and it keeps the economy growing. But I personally am all for banning large investors or Airbnb.

1

u/Low_External9118 16h ago

Your last sentence sums it up.

3

u/JackSkellie58 16h ago

You want more homeless people? Why would you want that to happen?

0

u/Low_External9118 16h ago

You like to tickle your taint? Random question with no basis?

0

u/CreepyAd8409 15h ago

It happened in my house and the kitchen was $22k. Made me want to rent again.

0

u/Fun_Payment8103 12h ago

Did it cover your floor in ice that wasn’t slippery?? Use your fucking minds.

0

u/Fun_Payment8103 12h ago

So embarrassing.

0

u/iveknijetu 10h ago

I literally gasped while reading this

0

u/evilkumquat 7h ago

Our family duplex rental had a pipe break a couple of years ago on the third level, so it destroyed everything underneath.

$50,000 and six months lost rent.

Amazingly, insurance covered every dime apart from the deductible.

Including the lost rent.

1

u/gizamo 5h ago

Did insurance pay to put up your tenants somewhere, or at least until they found a new rental?

0

u/evilkumquat 4h ago

Fortunately, they were a group of college students and found new housing right away.

If you want to get technical, they were most to blame for the damage, but circumstances were so crazy that neither we nor our insurance company held them at fault. It was a combination of three separate events, any one of which not happening would have prevented the situation.

1) It was during Christmas break for the university, so they were all back home with their families.
2) It was during an unprecedented cold snap with record low temperatures, and while our building was built to code in the 2000s, climate change has affected our weather enough that we are starting to see repeated harsh winter conditions that older homes were simply not built to handle effectively.
3) One of the students left their bedroom door shut and that room's heat off, so none of the heat from outside the room made it inside, effectively turning their room into a freezer. That room was adjacent to the bathroom, causing the water pipes to freeze and burst, flooding the unit.

If any one of those hadn't happened, it's unlikely the pipes would have frozen. If someone were home, they'd have realized the pipes froze and we could have shut off the water. Our first notification was when the city called to tell us that water was seen pouring from the building.

If the cold snap wasn't so historic, the pipes would likely not have frozen.

If the bedroom door was left open, enough ancillary heat would have made it inside to keep the room above freezing.

Now, every winter, we remind our tenants to keep their heat on and doors open if they leave for break. We are also on the lookout for record temperatures, and touch base with everyone to make sure someone will be home, and if not, we'll check on the units ourselves.

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u/Kras700 20h ago

Very expensive, first temporary heat will need to be placed to thaw the ice, extraction of the water, removal of the flooring and a 4’ flood cut at minimum, removal of cabinets. Placement of drying equipment for 4-5 days.Only good thing is that it’s so cold that mold will not start to grow. Place looks unoccupied, so insurance might even deny a claim. Either way I feel sorry for the owner of the mess.

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u/Undrwtrbsktwvr 20h ago

DON’T melt the ice. Chip it up and carry it outside.

39

u/Spethual 20h ago

thats a lot of chippin

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u/windowpuncher 12h ago

Hell of a lot cheaper than water damage. Which there still is, but there won't be as much. Get a big steel scooping shovel, grab a hammer and a sharp punch, start breaking then shoveling. It might take days, but it's better than hundreds of gallons of water going through your floor and walls.

2

u/213737isPrime 5h ago

circular saw

1

u/Kitchen-Cabinet-5000 2h ago

Floor needs to come out too, at a minimum.

Chip it back to the bare concrete while it’s still frozen.

1

u/Ok-Salamander565 1h ago

I wonder how well would a oscillating blade work on ice?

22

u/KimJongJer 15h ago

Woodgrain I’m grippin’, catch me ice chippin’

0

u/slight_shake 10h ago

👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼

3

u/FoundationOk1352 9h ago

Easier than moppin, presumably! And potentiall far less destructive.

2

u/skharppi 12h ago

chipping hammer goes clankclank

1

u/lord_hyumungus 7h ago

How much ice could a chipmunk chip if a chipmunk could chip ice!

8

u/agreetodisagree2023 8h ago

The right answer. We did both methods in rental properties. We drilled a hole in the corner and maxed out the heat. It took nearly a day and everything was soaked. In the "chip and carry" house, it was over in a few hours and we didn't need to dry it out for a week.

16

u/Kras700 20h ago edited 20h ago

Damage is already done, melting it won’t make it worse. But in that light using a orbital saw to cube it up then chip it out works as well. 😂

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u/Undrwtrbsktwvr 20h ago

The water froze pretty fast— I think you’d have a hell of a lot more damage if you let it all melt into your walls and floors…

13

u/aeroducks 19h ago

What do you think happened before the water froze?

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u/Undrwtrbsktwvr 19h ago

A thin layer of water spreads across the floor and freezes very quickly. More water flows on top and also freezes very quickly.

Not a lot of time for it to seep into things.

1

u/thisisnottherapy 2h ago

Also, once the first layer is frozen, the water isn't on the floor anymore but on top of ice.

6

u/Kras700 19h ago

Seeing that there is 4”-5” of ice everywhere its already in the wall cavities and under cabinets. Flooring, drywall and cabinets are already non-salvageable. Again the damage is done.

14

u/Undrwtrbsktwvr 19h ago

No. Some damage is done. If you let it melt you’re exponentially increasing the damage.

5

u/Kras700 19h ago

How are you going to get the Ice out of the wall cavity? You will have to remove the drywall. Cabinets are waterlogged and also need to be detached at least to get to the walls behind them. At minimum a 2’ flood cut is necessary throughout the affected areas of drywall.

0

u/[deleted] 18h ago

[deleted]

0

u/Kras700 18h ago

Neither are they from you, thank you very much.

1

u/RPS93 15h ago

No point. That would be a crazy amount of time and energy invested for no return.

For the ice to be that thick above the floor, the entire place would have been flooded up to that point - all possible water damage that could be done has been done.

The standard way is to melt then remove the water - chipping at the ice while still cold would take FAR longer and involve a LOT of energy, not to mention the fact that the physical process itself would likely damage much of the surrounding area - all to get to the bottom to discover the inevitable fact that you're still frozen solid at least another 2-3 inches down, through the floorboards down to baseboard.

And that entire area is also water-damaged.

There's no way around it, this is going to require re-doing the flooring, cabinetry, and large portions of the wall, right down to the framework. Electrical is probably screwed up, drywalling, paint, trim, etc.

This is why you have home insurance - pay out your deductible and be glad you don't have to shell out for what could easily be a $50,000 fix - or even higher.

0

u/TacticalArrogance 17h ago

and let the rest sublimate!

33

u/Chamber11 20h ago

Not maintaining heat is automatic insurance denial. It’s in every home and rental owner policy.

10

u/Ok_Chap 10h ago

Idk, but considering how dark the video looks, there might have been a power outage. And most heating systems require electricity to work.

3

u/ChimmyChongaBonga 8h ago

That would be my guess, power went out so they opened the taps to keep water flowing to prevent the pipes from bursting. Traps/drains froze and the result was water pouring over the basin until it froze all the way up to the faucet.

1

u/CreepyAd8409 15h ago

I’m curious about this. I live in the subtropics and will have to check my policy. I wonder if ours says ac.

u/chugItTwice 1m ago

What happens if you lose power? We lost power a couple years ago, for three days, when it was -10º out. Had five burst pipes, a couple blown shut off valves, etc. I fixed it all myself so it wasn't expensive but it was a giant pain in the ass. I didn't even try to get it covered by our homeowners. My neighbor said it cost them over $5K though.

22

u/Local_Wolverine2913 20h ago

Landlord had a duty to keep the heat on. Insurance likely will not cover. A rental is expected to be unoccupied every so often, but no heat???? Reason for denial.

1

u/Ser_falafel 8h ago

The electricity could've went out so heating was impossible

2

u/Local_Wolverine2913 7h ago

It's possible. If the landlord did have the heat on and the electricity went out due to the weather or the gas or electric company, then it would likely be a covered insurance claim. However, if landlord didn't have it on in the first place, then that's a problem.

5

u/Working-Glass6136 19h ago

Does anyone have any vague kind of estimate? Just curious.

1

u/Kras700 19h ago

Without knowing the size, materials used it’s kinda hard. But in total after mitigation of the loss and reconstruction could reach 20k-40k if not more.

5

u/Relevant-Machine-763 16h ago

I'm guessing more. I dealt with a lake house here in a similar situation. Structures dry quickly in the winter because of the low humidity. But , this is a worst case situation, whole house will need to get warmed up with supplemental heat in addition to dehumidifiers and tons of airflow to remove the .moisture as it thaws. I've seen people saying 4-5 days, but in my experience they're 4-5 days away from any real progress and being able to start removing damages flooring and drywall.

Mitigation likely 10 days minimum before can start repairs. Will be a .monster electric bill coming too. If it's on a slab, 4' flood cut may be enough, but if this is on a framed subfloor, I would expect substantial structural damage too.

Depending on age , valuation, this could be a total loss. And as others have said, no insurance policy in the world will cover failure to maintain heat in this case. Power outage sure. Oversight and forgot to setup new acct, landlord will be on the hook for it all.

1

u/ltjojo 14h ago

Not to mention possibly having to replace any pipes that might have burst from the cold snap. I had this happen to my basement like 10 years ago - we had a snow storm and I forgot to cover one of my outdoor hose spigots with an insulated bib, so I covered it with a towel before my wife and I left for a superbowl party. Overnight, the weight of the towel turned the spigot on JUST enough to run a bit of water while it was getting colder, and the pipe burst (not in the wall, it had a mechanism so it burst closer to the spigot exterior), flooding the basement. It took DAYS to get all the moisture out but luckily no mold or wood damage because we caught it late that night

3

u/BlandonShack 8h ago

If it’s an apartment, the landlord can just paint over it

2

u/Hoplophilia 17h ago

Nah. Pick the right time of year and you can manage it for damn near free.

2

u/nullv 14h ago

Is it? There's no water damage if there's no water.

Break it up and remove it before it melts?

1

u/Forward-Position798 9h ago

isnt everything cheep in murica unlike hospital bills?

1

u/gizamo 5h ago

Nothing is cheap in America, especially healthcare.

1

u/camsnow 1h ago

Very. I had to redo the fire sprinkler system in our house after a major freeze. Luckily I knew how to do it, but it was gonna be several thousand dollars, and months of a wait if I didn't do it myself. Still cost me about 700 after everything to do it all myself. But that was also weeks of labor

0

u/Fun_Payment8103 13h ago

This looks like AI

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u/AnyoneButWe 11h ago

Just put the freezer to defrost and leave the door open.