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Home Warranties
Traditionally, home warranties have protected homeowners
from repair costs that aren't covered by home insurance,
especially the inner workings of a home--plumbing,
heating, air conditioning, and major appliances. Home
warranties are often crucial in real estate transactions
because they help home buyers as well as sellers rest more
easily, safe in the knowledge that an unforeseen problem
with a furnace won't spark a financial conflict, postpone
a real estate closing, or blow a deal altogether.
While home warranties aren't necessary for every current
homeowner, those who benefit most are those trying to buy
or sell homes.
When you buy a home, you assume the burden of maintaining
a variety of systems and appliances. Sellers are required
to disclose known problems, but can't be blamed for
passing along a washing machine or an oven that fails six
months after the sale. That's when a home warranty goes to
work.
The National Board of Realtors describes home warranties
as service contracts, typically lasting one year, that
cover the repair or replacement of major home systems and
appliances that break down due to normal wear and tear.
Home warranties don't overlap or replace the homeowner's
insurance policy, says Alan Pyles, president of HMS Home
Warranty. "They work hand-in-glove," he explains. "The
warranty covers mechanical breakdowns, while insurance
typically repairs the related damage. Think of it as a
cause/effect relationship: If a pipe burst and destroyed a
wall in your home, we'd repair the pipe that burst; your
insurance would fix the wall."
Similarly, if your refrigerator were to stop working while
you were on vacation, there could be spoilage, leakage, or
floor damage. Your homeowners insurance might pay for the
damage to the linoleum, while the home warranty would
cover the mechanical breakdown of the refrigerator.
Generally, home warranties cover malfunctions of major
appliances such as washers, dryers, ovens, refrigerators,
as well as ductwork, plumbing, electrical, heating, and
air-conditioning systems. In some cases, or for additional
fees, the warranty might extend to garbage disposals,
doorbells, paddle fans, garage-door openers, water
softeners, trash-compactors, and built-in microwaves.
The age of the home doesn't matter as far as coverage is
concerned, as long the covered items are in good working
order at the start of the contract, explains John Yacono,
vice president of national accounts for American Home
Shield, the nation's oldest and largest provider of home
warranty contracts.
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