Insurance exclusions are the specific losses your policy will not pay for, and reading them is the only reliable way to know what you are actually covered for. Most coverage surprises trace back to an exclusion no one noticed until after a loss happened.
Key takeaways
- An exclusion is a cause of loss, situation, or item your policy specifically removes from coverage.
- Every policy has exclusions, and together they define the real edges of your protection.
- Common exclusions include floods, earthquakes, normal wear, business use, and intentional acts.
- Whether your coverage is named perils or open perils changes who must prove what.
- You can often close a gap with an endorsement, a rider, or a separate policy.
What an insurance exclusion is
An exclusion is a clause that removes a specific cause of loss, situation, or item from what your policy covers. Think of your coverage as a circle: the policy describes what falls inside it, and the exclusions carve out the parts that fall outside.
Exclusions are not hidden traps. They keep premiums affordable by leaving out risks that are better handled with specialized coverage, that are too unpredictable to price, or that the policy was never meant to address. Reading them tells you exactly where your protection stops.
Common exclusions worth knowing
Different policies exclude different things, but some patterns show up again and again.
| Policy type | Often excluded | How people usually cover it |
|---|---|---|
| Home | Floods and earthquakes | A separate flood or earthquake policy |
| Home | High-value jewelry or collectibles above a limit | A scheduled item or rider |
| Auto | Normal wear and tear | Routine maintenance you pay for |
| Auto | Using your car for business or rideshare | A commercial or rideshare endorsement |
| Most policies | Intentional or criminal acts | Generally not insurable |
For example, a burst pipe inside your home is often covered, but rising water from a nearby river is typically a flood, which standard home policies exclude. Knowing that difference ahead of time is what lets you decide whether to add separate flood coverage.
Named perils versus open perils
How your policy is written changes how exclusions work and who carries the burden of proof.
- Named perils coverage pays only for causes of loss the policy lists by name. If your loss is not on the list, it is not covered, and it is up to you to show the cause is a listed peril.
- Open perils coverage (sometimes called "all risk") pays for any cause of loss except those the policy specifically excludes. Here the insurer must point to an exclusion to deny a claim.
Open perils coverage is generally broader because anything not excluded is included. Checking which approach your policy uses tells you where you stand if a claim is ever questioned.
How to find and close coverage gaps
You do not need to memorize your policy, but a short review pays off.
- Find the exclusions section of each policy, usually clearly labeled.
- Note any excluded risk that genuinely applies to your life, such as flooding in your area or a home business.
- Ask your agent how each gap is normally covered, whether through an endorsement, a rider, or a separate policy.
- Re-check your exclusions after big life changes, like a move, a renovation, or a new side business.
The goal is simple: no surprises. When you know what is excluded before a loss, you can decide on purpose whether to accept that gap or fill it.
Frequently asked questions
Does every insurance policy have exclusions?
Yes. Every policy includes exclusions, and they are a normal part of how coverage is defined and priced. The important thing is to read them so you know where your protection ends.
Are floods and earthquakes covered by home insurance?
Standard home policies typically exclude both floods and earthquakes. These risks are usually covered through separate policies, so it is worth asking your insurer how to add them if they apply to you.
Can I get coverage for something my policy excludes?
Often, yes. Many exclusions can be addressed with an endorsement, a rider, or a separate specialized policy. Ask your agent which option fits the specific risk you want to cover.
This guide is general education, not insurance advice. Confirm specifics with a licensed agent or your state department of insurance.
- Insurance Information Institute — What is and is not covered — Other Authoritative · retrieved May 31, 2026