Here’s my situation: 120+yo row home. There are no trees or other plants behind my house where the sewer line goes out to the street, so roots shouldn’t be an issue. However, I don’t know how old the line is or whether it’s been replaced in the past century. It could be ye olde cast iron (the main appears to be metal), definitely not PVC.
At $9-17/mo, these plans seem relatively inexpensive for something that could run me several grand to fix, but I’m worried about whether they’ll actually pay out for reasonable replacement costs, and one thing I keep finding in each plan I’ve read is that it only covers the line from the point it exits my home’s foundation. What about the portion inside my home?
Has anyone ever had positive experience with sewer line insurance? The few sources I’ve seen here and other subs don’t seem to speak highly of sewer line insurance experiences, but there’s not much out there.
Does it matter that they won’t repair/replace what’s inside my home? Should a company be replacing the whole thing if it fails?
Given that there’s no earth, grass, or trees, only concrete behind our rows out to the back alley (and then more concrete and more houses), should I be concerned about my sewer line at all, so long as I keep up regular maintenance and pay attention to what goes down the drain? Is there really any significant risk aside from clogs?
CaptainStudly t1_j1qqglk wrote
HomeServe exterior line coverage is 100% worth it. My main exit line developed a hole, let your imagination run wild with that. Filed a claim, guy came out with an endoscope and found the hole, his company evaluated options, and within something like three weeks my drain was fixed, all covered by the policy.
Edit to add: as far as I can tell this insurance works the way insurance is supposed to work, by pooling risk. You look at it and wonder how they don't get killed by adverse selection, and I still sorta wonder that considering that it's not compulsory. But if you step back and look at how we finance fixing a city full of 100-year-old drains, the answer is everybody pays $10/mo and we fix them as they break.