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Coverage Standard Property Explicitly Excludes

Commercial Earthquake Insurance for California Operations.

Standard commercial property and BOP policies explicitly exclude earthquake — California's most significant seismic exposure isn't covered without dedicated earthquake insurance. DIC (Difference in Conditions) policies, standalone earthquake markets, and business interruption from seismic events for operations in California's known fault zones.

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What this solves

Why California businesses need earthquake coverage.

California sits on multiple major fault systems — San Andreas, Hayward, San Jacinto, and dozens of others. USGS estimates a 70% probability of a magnitude 6.7+ earthquake in the Bay Area within 30 years, and a 60% probability in Southern California. Beyond catastrophic events, smaller earthquakes routinely cause millions in commercial losses — building structural damage, equipment failures, inventory destruction, and weeks of business interruption. Standard property explicitly excludes all of it. Commercial earthquake coverage is the only insurance that responds.

Earthquake premium is significant — typically 0.5% to 2% of building value annually depending on construction type, location, and soil conditions. A $1M building in a high-risk zone might run $5K-$15K annually for earthquake coverage with $200K-$500K deductible. The deductibles are intentionally high (typically 10-25% of insured value) because the coverage is structured for catastrophic events, not routine claims. For California operations in high-risk zones, the question isn't whether earthquake will happen — it's whether you'll be covered when it does. We place earthquake across DIC markets, the California Earthquake Authority for some risks, and standalone earthquake carriers based on the specific property profile.

  • Building structure earthquake damage
  • Business personal property and inventory
  • Business interruption from seismic events
  • Extra expense for rapid recovery
  • Tenant improvements and betterments
  • High deductibles (typically 10-25%)

Questions

Commercial Earthquake FAQ

Is earthquake insurance really excluded from my standard property?

Yes, explicitly. Every commercial property policy in California includes a specific earthquake exclusion that knocks out coverage for any loss caused by earthquake, including aftershocks, related fires that originate from earthquake-caused damage, and related landslides. The exclusion is unambiguous — there's no path to coverage through standard property. Dedicated earthquake insurance is the only option.

What's a DIC policy and how does it work?

DIC (Difference in Conditions) is the most common form of California commercial earthquake coverage. DIC policies fill the 'difference' between what's covered by standard property and what's excluded — primarily earthquake and flood. A typical DIC policy provides earthquake coverage with terms that mirror or expand on standard property. Premium is separate from base property, and DIC carriers underwrite for seismic exposure specifically.

How much does commercial earthquake cost in California?

Variable by risk profile. A $500K building in a moderate-risk zone might run $2K-$5K annually with a 10% deductible. A $2M building in a high-risk zone (Bay Area, near major faults) might run $20K-$50K with a 15-20% deductible. Reinforced concrete buildings cost less per dollar of coverage than wood-frame or unreinforced masonry. We shop DIC and standalone earthquake markets to find competitive coverage for the specific building.

Deep dive

California commercial earthquake — what to know.

How are earthquake deductibles structured?

Earthquake deductibles are typically percentage-based — 10%, 15%, 20%, or 25% of the insured value, not a flat dollar amount. A 15% deductible on a $1M building means $150K out-of-pocket before coverage responds. Higher deductibles dramatically reduce premium; lower deductibles increase premium significantly. We help businesses balance deductible vs. premium based on their cash reserves and risk tolerance.

Does earthquake cover business interruption?

Most California DIC and standalone earthquake policies include business interruption coverage for earthquake-caused losses, with terms similar to standard BI. Coverage pays lost income during the recovery period (typically 6-18 months for serious earthquake damage). Extra expense coverage funds expedited recovery (temporary location, equipment rental, etc.). We confirm BI limits match realistic recovery timelines for the specific operation.

How does construction type affect earthquake premium?

Dramatically. Reinforced concrete and steel-frame buildings perform best in earthquakes and command the lowest rates. Wood-frame is moderate. Unreinforced masonry (URM — common in older California buildings) is highest-risk and may be uninsurable in some markets. Soft-story buildings (typically wood-frame with parking underneath) require specific underwriting and often command higher rates. We work with carriers that understand California construction types and assess buildings accordingly.

What about earthquake retrofit requirements?

California has retrofit requirements for certain building types in specific jurisdictions — Los Angeles, San Francisco, and others have mandatory soft-story retrofit programs. Buildings that comply with retrofit requirements typically get better rates and broader availability. We help building owners understand retrofit status, document compliance, and leverage retrofits in underwriting.

Are tenant improvements and contents covered for earthquake?

Most California commercial earthquake policies cover tenant improvements (your build-out in a leased space) and business personal property (contents, equipment, inventory) at appropriate limits — with the same percentage deductible applied. Operations with significant TI or contents value should size limits accordingly. We coordinate building, TI, and contents coverage to match actual exposure.

What's the California Earthquake Authority and does it apply to commercial?

The California Earthquake Authority (CEA) is a state-run program providing residential earthquake coverage. It generally doesn't write commercial earthquake — commercial operations need DIC or standalone commercial earthquake markets. Some habitational properties (small apartment buildings, condos) may have access to CEA-like residential programs, but most commercial habitational uses commercial earthquake markets.

How do soil conditions and proximity to faults affect coverage?

California carriers underwrite earthquake using detailed seismic models that incorporate distance to known active faults, soil type and amplification factors, building characteristics, and historical seismicity. Buildings on soft soil near active faults command higher rates and may face availability issues in some markets. Liquefaction zones (areas prone to soil liquefaction during seismic events) have specific underwriting considerations. We work with carriers that have sophisticated California seismic modeling.

What's typically excluded from earthquake coverage?

Standard exclusions: pre-existing damage (you can't insure existing problems), landslide and earth movement not caused by earthquake, tsunami-related losses (often separate), and certain types of business interruption beyond the policy period. Some policies exclude specific high-risk areas or require additional underwriting for buildings in particular zones. We review exclusions carefully and address material gaps.

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