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Guide · The declarations-page surprise

Your hurricane deductible is probably a percentage. Here's the math.

The regular deductible on a homeowners policy is a flat number you chose once, like $1,000. In much of hurricane country, storm damage doesn't use that number. It uses a separate deductible calculated as a percentage of your home's insured value, and most people meet theirs for the first time inside a claim.

A "2 percent deductible" sounds small. On a $300,000 policy it's $6,000, before the first dollar of payout.

The math, in one table

Industry references put typical hurricane deductibles at 1 to 5 percent of the dwelling's insured value, with higher percentages in some high-risk coastal areas. The percentage applies to the amount the house is insured for, not to the size of the damage:

Dwelling insured for1%2%5%
$200,000$2,000$4,000$10,000
$300,000$3,000$6,000$15,000
$500,000$5,000$10,000$25,000

Arithmetic illustration only; your policy's numbers live on its declarations page. Note the quiet corollary: as your dwelling coverage rises with rebuild costs, the deductible rises with it, without anyone mailing you a warning.

What actually triggers it

This is where policies genuinely differ, and where asking beats assuming. Depending on the state and the contract, the separate deductible may apply only to named hurricanes, to any named storm, or to windstorms generally, and the trigger can hinge on official declarations like hurricane warnings, with rules that vary by state. The same roof damage can hit the $1,000 deductible or the $6,000 one depending on how the storm was classified. The question for your agent: "Exactly what conditions switch my policy from the regular deductible to the storm one?"

Why this belongs in your emergency fund math: the deductible is, functionally, the storm bill you've agreed to self-insure. If a 2 percent deductible is $6,000 and the repair fund holds $2,000, that gap is a real readiness gap, as real as the plywood. Some households buy the deductible down for a higher premium; some deliberately hold it in savings. Either is a plan. Discovering it during a claim is not.

Three more questions while you have the agent

Make it a ten-minute call: the Insurance Readiness Checklist scripts the whole conversation and prints. The readiness check tells you where insurance ranks among your gaps.

Educational only, never insurance advice; deductibles, triggers, and valuation terms are contract- and state-specific, and your agent or a licensed professional is the source of truth. The 1-to-5-percent typical range follows Insurance Information Institute and NAIC consumer references (some states and policies run higher), data-verified at build 2026-07-08 and logged as VERIFY.md V26; dollar figures on this page are arithmetic illustrations, not quotes or averages.