Thunderbird is insured with Boat US / Geico, so I called them directly for a quote on Catalina 320 (1999). Customer service person on the phone did not seem particularly dialed in to sailboat insurance and boat ownership issues (just a feeling I got from the way she asked questions). Questions came at me in sort of an unnatural, formatted manner. Maybe that was just my impression. I'd never been asked this question before … "Do you race the boat?" My first reaction was to answer no (since I don't even own the boat yet). Then, being the honest guy that I am, I said I probably will but maybe only a couple of times in a season in a very informal venue. So she said, then the answer is yes. I said, I guess so - I've never been asked this before - it's not like I bought this boat for racing.
Then, she put a value on the boat that is $20,000 less than the average that I calculated for about 15 boats on the east coast that are the exact same model, within a 5 year age window. When I gave here that info, she put me on hold for a while and then provided a quote for "agreed value" based on purchase price. The quote seemed pretty high to me (over $1,100). Deductible starts at 2% of boat value. I didn't pay over the phone. Instead I asked to study the quote before paying. I don't see any provision for "racing" in the quote. I'm wondering if my answer caused the quote to jump, or if it is the "agreed value". Any insight?
Then, she put a value on the boat that is $20,000 less than the average that I calculated for about 15 boats on the east coast that are the exact same model, within a 5 year age window. When I gave here that info, she put me on hold for a while and then provided a quote for "agreed value" based on purchase price. The quote seemed pretty high to me (over $1,100). Deductible starts at 2% of boat value. I didn't pay over the phone. Instead I asked to study the quote before paying. I don't see any provision for "racing" in the quote. I'm wondering if my answer caused the quote to jump, or if it is the "agreed value". Any insight?