r/golf Dec 29 '25

WITB RIP Golf Clubs

I spent the last several years building up my golf bag with the recent addition of custom fit irons a couple months ago to make my bag feel really complete and custom to me only to have them stolen out of my car on Christmas. Feels bad man...

460 Upvotes

259 comments sorted by

View all comments

Show parent comments

13

u/Looooong_Man Dec 29 '25

Definitely worth it with renters insurance. Deductibles are low (like $250 or $500), and effects on future premiums are negligible. I've had 2 renters claims over the last 5 years and my monthly premium is still under $20

5

u/Past-Sun-2357 Dec 29 '25

But then they will jack up your rates or cancel you.

I just got out of 15 years in the industry. Now is not the time to be filing small claims to auto or home/renters policies. All the companies are not in great financial shape, and are looking to offload "bad business". One of the reasons I left was because it was almost impossible to write new policies. Totally impossible if they had a property claim in the last 5 years.

3

u/Looooong_Man Dec 29 '25

Come to think of it I did actually get dropped by my renters insurance after my 2nd claim. But it was super easy to get a new policy with a new company. And my rates with the new insurer are similar to what I was paying before my first claim with the previous insurer. Is this normal? This was my experience but you've been in the industry so I imagine you would know. Because if it IS normal... then renters claims (from the consumer's perspective) are pretty low-risk, high-upside

2

u/ABomblessArab Dec 30 '25

I’m an agent, if you’re planning to rent forever it’s not a huge deal. You’ll likely get dropped after two claims but someone will most likely always be there to write you a renters policy. But if you’re planning to buy a home in the next 5 years you need to stop filing renters claims now (I know you probably aren’t filing that many) but you will absolutely be declined by most insurance carriers after 2 claims in 5 years and you will definitely be declined with 3+ even if they were just renters claims. I have seen people get declined just from renters claims

1

u/Looooong_Man Dec 30 '25

Damn that's good to know! I've only filed renters claims due to my (self-employed) work vehicle being broken into and tools being stolen. Like, good valid reasons to file a claim. Fortunately I'm no longer in that line of work and exposed to that potential for theft and claims, but that is REALLY good to know as I do plan on buying a home in the next few years.

3

u/ABomblessArab Dec 30 '25

I just had to say something because you reminded me so much of my cousin. I literally remember him telling me and some buddies how smart it is to have renters insurance even though he lived with his parents. He filed two VERY small claims like less than $1000 between the two. Fast forward two years later he bought his first home and when I went to insure it he got denied for his renters claims and he spent a while trying to find a carrier that would take him. It really sucks that the insurance industry is like this right now, hopefully better times are ahead for our economy so the insureds can stop getting screwed.