Owning
a valuable piece of jewelry is why taking a home inventory is so important for all homeowners and renters insurance polices.
There's no harm in dreaming about winning the lottery, or finding
a valuable piece of jewelry or artwork in the attic.
For the single mother, who had a lucrative career as a gemologist and spent hours examining
valuable pieces of jewelry, it seemed as if — in a split second — her life changed.
Not exact matches
You need money fast, so you take something you own, like a
piece of jewelry, a computer or some other
valuable to use as collateral for a pawn shop loan.
Some examples would be a floater to protect
jewelry, or an endorsement to raise the dollar limit for your laptop and computer equipment, or a rider to protect a
valuable piece of art.
And when the item is a family heirloom or a
piece of valuable jewelry, losing that collateral for the sake
of $ 3,000 or so can be a bitter pill to swallow.
If the value
of your
jewelry exceeds that limit you can schedule an endorsement (or rider) to protect specific
valuable pieces.
Extended coverage (also called a floater policy) is appropriate if you have a particularly expensive
piece of jewelry, a
valuable stamp collection, or other similar item that has especially high value.
To keep coverage affordable, standard homeowners policies generally only provide about $ 1,500 in coverage for such items, which means that the insurer won't pay more than that amount for any given
piece of jewelry or other
valuable item.
An appraisal is usually necessary before a home or a
valuable possession, such as
piece of jewelry or fine art, can be insured.
That is because if some
of these
jewelry pieces are inherited, they may be especially
valuable or unable to be replaced.
Valuable items can be anything that the LA renter considers
valuable to them, but some popular choices
of items to cover are
pieces of jewelry, diamonds, nice instruments, or famous artwork.