Most homeowners have both a homeowners insurance policy and hear about home warranties, but assume they cover the same thing. They do not. Confusing the two can leave you with a surprise bill when something breaks, or filing a claim only to be told the damage is not covered. Here is a clear breakdown of what each one does and why many homeowners choose to have both.
What Homeowners Insurance Covers
Homeowners insurance protects you against sudden, unexpected events that cause damage to your home or property. Think of it as protection against disasters and accidents.
It typically covers:
- Fire, smoke, and lightning damage
- Windstorm, hail, and certain weather events
- Theft and vandalism
- Water damage from burst pipes (sudden and accidental, not gradual leaks)
- Liability if someone is injured on your property
- Loss of use if you cannot live in your home after a covered event
Most mortgage lenders require homeowners insurance. It is not optional if you have a mortgage.
What a Home Warranty Covers
A home warranty covers mechanical breakdown of home systems and appliances from normal wear and tear. It is essentially a service contract. When your HVAC stops working because it’s old or a part fails, a home warranty pays for the repair or replacement. Homeowners insurance will not touch that claim because there was no sudden damaging event — it just broke down over time.
A Rapid Home Warranty Platinum plan covers:
- Heating and cooling (HVAC) systems
- Plumbing systems and water heater
- Electrical systems
- Kitchen appliances (refrigerator, oven, dishwasher)
- Washer and dryer
- Garage door opener
- Roof leak repair
- Pool and spa equipment
Side by Side
Homeowners Insurance
- Covers sudden damage and disasters
- Required by most mortgage lenders
- Pays for structural repairs
- Covers theft and liability
- Does NOT cover appliance breakdowns
- Does NOT cover wear and tear
Home Warranty
- Covers mechanical breakdown and wear
- Optional but highly recommended
- Pays for repairs and replacements
- Covers systems and appliances
- Does NOT cover storm or fire damage
- Does NOT cover pre-existing conditions
A Real-World Example
Your air conditioner stops working in August. Here is how each product responds:
- Homeowners insurance: Denies the claim. The AC stopped working because the compressor wore out over 12 years of use. That is not a covered event under a standard insurance policy.
- Home warranty: Accepts the claim. Normal wear and tear on a covered system is exactly what a home warranty is designed for. You pay the service fee and a technician is dispatched.
Now flip it. A tree falls on your roof during a storm and damages your attic. Homeowners insurance covers that. A home warranty does not — that is a sudden external event, not a mechanical breakdown.
Do You Need Both?
Yes, and here is why. Homeowners insurance and a home warranty fill two completely different gaps. Insurance protects you from catastrophic losses you could never afford to pay on your own. A home warranty protects you from the steady drumbeat of expensive but ordinary breakdowns that happen in every home. Neither one replaces the other.
The average home sees a major appliance or system failure roughly once every two to three years. HVAC repairs alone average $400 to $2,000 per incident. A home warranty at $49.99 per month pays for itself on a single mid-range repair.
What to Watch Out for in a Home Warranty
- Pre-existing conditions: Most warranties exclude problems that existed before coverage began. When you buy a home, get a warranty active before you move in.
- Coverage caps: Some plans cap payouts per item. Read the contract carefully so you know the limits.
- Service fees: Every warranty plan has a fee when a technician is dispatched. Know what yours is upfront.
- What’s not covered: Code upgrades, cosmetic defects, and improper installation are typically excluded. Review the exclusions list in your contract.
Ready to Fill the Gap Insurance Leaves?
A Rapid Home Warranty Platinum plan covers what insurance does not. Get your free, no-obligation quote in under 2 minutes.
Get My Free QuoteThe Bottom Line
Homeowners insurance and a home warranty are not competitors. They are complements. Insurance covers the big disasters. A warranty handles the everyday breakdowns. Together, they close almost every gap a homeowner faces. If you have insurance but not a warranty, you are covered for fires and storms but exposed every time your dishwasher quits, your water heater fails, or your HVAC gives out. That is a real financial risk worth addressing before it becomes an emergency.
