Personal Insurance
Home Insurance Built for Treasure Valley Homeowners
Bittick shops multiple carriers to match your home's specific risks, from freeze-thaw foundation movement to wildfire smoke damage.
Home insurance pays to repair or rebuild your home, replace your belongings, and cover your legal liability if someone is injured on your property. For most Treasure Valley families, the home is the single largest asset on the balance sheet, and the mortgage lender typically requires coverage anyway. But the minimum a lender requires and the coverage that actually protects you are often two different things. Bittick is an independent agency, so we place policies with multiple carriers and look for the fit that matches your home's age, construction, location, and the way you actually live in it.
Your home faces more risks than you think.
Click each hotspot to see what could go wrong, and how the right Bittick homeowners policy keeps it from becoming your problem.
What this coverage includes
Dwelling and attached structures
This is the core of any homeowners policy: coverage for the physical structure of your home, including attached garages, built-in fixtures, and permanently installed systems like your HVAC and electrical panel. If a covered event (fire, windstorm, lightning, or sudden water damage from a burst pipe) damages the structure, the dwelling coverage pays for repairs or full reconstruction up to your policy limit. In the Treasure Valley, where new construction costs per square foot have climbed sharply, keeping your dwelling limit current is worth reviewing every couple of years.
Personal property and contents
Your furniture, electronics, clothing, appliances, and other belongings are covered under the personal property portion of the policy. Coverage applies to losses inside the home and, depending on the policy form, to items you take with you (a laptop stolen from your car, for example). High-value items, including jewelry, fine art, wine collections, and collectibles, typically have sub-limits under a standard policy. If you own things in those categories, a scheduled personal property endorsement or a separate inland marine floater can cover them for their actual appraised value.
Liability protection
Personal liability coverage pays if a guest is injured at your home and you are found legally responsible, or if you accidentally damage someone else's property. The policy covers legal defense costs as well as any judgment or settlement up to the policy limit. Medical payments coverage, a smaller companion benefit, pays a neighbor's minor medical bills without requiring a lawsuit. If your total assets exceed your liability limit, an umbrella policy can add a million dollars or more of coverage on top.
Additional living expenses
If a covered loss forces your family out of the house while repairs are underway, loss-of-use coverage reimburses temporary housing, meals, and other increased costs of living. For a family displaced in Boise or Meridian during a busy construction season, hotel rates can add up fast. Policies differ on whether this benefit is capped at a dollar amount, a time limit, or a percentage of your dwelling coverage, so it is worth understanding which applies to your policy.
Optional extensions worth knowing
Standard homeowners policies exclude flood damage (that requires a separate flood policy through the NFIP or a private flood carrier) and typically limit sewer or drain backup coverage to a small sublimit or exclude it entirely. Water backup coverage, earthquake endorsements, and off-premises theft riders are add-ons that cost relatively little but address risks that are genuinely common here. The Snake River and Boise River drainages have seen significant flood mapping changes, and some Treasure Valley neighborhoods that were not in mapped flood zones a decade ago now are.
Pairs well with
Flood Insurance
Standard homeowners policies do not cover rising water from outside the home. A separate flood policy is required for that exposure, and flood maps in the Treasure Valley have shifted enough that it is worth checking your property's current designation.
Learn more ›Umbrella Insurance
A personal umbrella policy adds liability coverage above your homeowners and auto limits. If your assets or income exceed what your base policies cover, an umbrella is the cost-efficient way to close that gap.
Learn more ›Auto Insurance
Most carriers offer a meaningful multi-policy discount when you bundle home and auto coverage. Beyond the discount, having both policies with the same carrier can simplify a claim where both are involved, like a garage fire that damages a parked vehicle.
Learn more ›Scheduled Personal Property (Inland Marine)
Inland marine is the coverage category that protects individual high-value items by name and appraised value. If you own jewelry, fine art, a wine collection, or expensive cameras and musical instruments, a floater fills the gap that standard contents coverage leaves.
Earthquake Insurance
Idaho sits on active fault systems, and the Wood River Valley and Boise Front have recorded notable seismic activity. Earthquake damage is excluded from standard homeowners policies, so a separate endorsement or policy is needed to cover it.