
Earthquake insurance is separately endorsed and can be purchased alongside your standard homeowners/renters policy. This coverage typically excludes damage from floods and tidal waves—even when the flood is related to the earthquake.
Flood insurance is another separate policy offered by many providers. They are specifically designed to protect your home, building contents, and belongings in the event of a flood.
Let our professional agents and brokers help you find the right policy at affordable premiums. We serve the State of Washington, Seattle, Tacoma and the entire Puget Sound. Call Today 206-759-2566 for a quote and save money!
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Earthquake Insurance
Flood Insurance
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In Idaho, heirs can sell the home, refinance to keep it, or deed it back. They typically repay the lesser of the loan balance or the home’s value (non-recourse rule). Lenders provide timelines and contacts; communication keeps options open.

Reverse mortgages are non-recourse: repayment is limited to the home’s value at sale, not the borrower’s other assets. If the balance exceeds value, insurance covers the difference (for HECM). Heirs aren’t personally liable beyond the property.
Sell the home and use proceeds to repay.
Refinance into a new loan to keep the home.
Deed in lieu (turn the property over if keeping/selling isn’t practical).
Lender is notified; heirs receive a point of contact and deadlines.
Estate/personal representative confirms intent: sell, keep, or deed in lieu.
Appraisal/market value is established to set expectations for sale/refi.
Extensions may be available with documented progress.
Death certificate, proof of authority (executor/PR), mortgage statements.
Insurance and tax records, utility info, recent maintenance/repair details.
Secure the property; maintain insurance and utilities to avoid damage.
If selling, choose an agent experienced with estate or trust sales.
Ask the lender for written payoff and timelines.
Respond to lender letters quickly.
Request a single point of contact.
Keep records of calls, emails, and mail.
If they’re a co-borrower, they can continue the loan terms.
If not on the loan, ask about non-borrowing spouse protections (HECM-specific).