At Sutton James, aviation insurance is all we do. We draw upon our experience as former aviation underwriters, pilots, and over 20 years of brokerage experience to negotiate the best insurance deals for our customers.
By Jon Doolittle | Reprinted from February 2005View PDF Version (pdf 455kb)
Flying is expensive because airplanes are expensive and helicopters even more so. For most light airplane owners who fly less than 100 hours each year, owning the airplane actually costs more than operating it. Due to the high cost of airplanes as well as the high cost of repairing them, buying the right amount of insurance to match the hull value is the only way to protect an expensive investment.
When deciding how much physical damage coverage to buy, there are two aspects to the equation, depending upon what happens to the airplane. The first is the more obvious: If the airplane is picked up by a cyclone and whisked off to Oz, how much money will you need to replace it with a similar airplane?
The corollary to this question is less obvious, but just as important. If your airplane is damaged, what insured hull value will make certain that your insurance policy responds correctly? In other words, you want to come out as whole as possible without overspending for insurance.
In the end, the two questions have a single answer. You’re most likely to get the best result from your policy if you cover the airplane for its current market value.
Wondering just how to figure out what that “correct” market value is for your airplane? The first thing to understand is that there’s no magic number as much as there is a range. The exercise of value determination is bound to be somewhat imprecise, since we’re trying to predict what a willing but unknown buyer would pay for the airplane if it were for sale at some not-exactly-known time in the not-too-distant future. This is a horseshoes-and-hand-grenade kind of thing: you just have to be close.
Airplanes are like houses in that even the ones that start out alike change over time. Some airplanes get more use than others. Some have the stock radios 20 years later while others are extensively retrofitted with the latest avionics. Some have always been kept in hangars and so on. Given the high percentage of a light airplane’s value that can be made up of engine, avionics and paint, two airplanes that left the factory on the same day 15 years ago can have values that differ by 50.
Fortunately, there are a number of industry indexes to help determine what that value range is. The Aircraft BlueBook Price Digest and V-Ref are probably the two most widely used. In addition to providing retail and wholesale prices for a given model, they’ll also provide adjustments for engine time, avionics and other optional equipment. These guides also provide information on the costs of overhauling engines and values for aircraft conversions.
If you don’t have access to a value guide, your insurance provider will. Guides are an excellent place to start, but if you’re still wondering if the number you come up with is in the right zone, talk to a dealer or broker who’s familiar with the type of aircraft you own. This will give you a sanity check on the book numbers and may identify an airplane that has a market value higher or lower than what the book shows.
Used aircraft values fluctuate depending on factors ranging from the price of new airplanes or the price of fuel to accident history to change of seasons. As fuel prices have increased, for example, certain types of fuel-efficient singles have become more valuable.
Publications such as Trade-A-Plane are also a source, but bear in mind that you’re looking at prices asked by sellers and you’ll have no way to know what airplanes actually sold for, or if they sold at all.
The reason that we spend so much time coming up with the correct number has to do with the way that aircraft insurance contracts are written. Car policies are usually based on the actual cash value of the car at the time of the accident. If your car is destroyed in an accident, the insurance company looks up the book value of your car, adjusts for mileage, backs out your deductible and writes you a check for less than you think you deserved. And this system works for cars, which are homogeneous when compared to airplanes.
Aircraft policies, on the other hand, are based on an “agreed value.” At the time the contract is written, you and your insurer agree on what the airplane is to be insured for, and that amount is written in the policy. The agreed value basis allows for the wide variation in values between similar aircraft to account for equipment, condition and time.
If the airplane is destroyed during the policy, the insurer will pay you that agreed amount, whether the airplane is really worth that amount or not. And therein lies the rub. If the value of your airplane is not in the zone, bad things can happen.
If you have underinsured the airplane by a great deal, the insurance company may be forced to write you a check for a total loss when it could be reasonably repaired. And can you guess who gets to keep what’s left of the airplane? Yup, they do. And they’ll sell it to salvage buyers to recoup as much of their loss as possible. Can you guess who decides whether it gets fixed or not? Mostly, the insurance companies do. Is it totally arbitrary? Nope, its all in your policy, right there in the fine print.
If you have overinsured the airplane by a great deal, things can go just as badly. This can force the insurer to fix the airplane when everybody would prefer to scrap it. Instead of getting a claim check for the market value of the airplane, which would be relatively quick and would allow you to replace it and move on, you have to wait through a lengthy repair.
When you finally get the airplane back, it comes with a stack of 337s the size of the Manhattan yellow pages and it’s worth much less than it was. And aircraft hull insurance policies don’t usually pay for a replacement airplane during the repair nor do they pay for loss of value because of damage history.
Bear in mind that if your insurer offers to pay a total loss, the company will usually take over whatever is left of the airplane, including everything permanently installed in it. The owner will usually fill out a bill of sale and turn over the logbooks and any other records.
Regardless of the policy language, one of the things that separates the good aircraft insurers from the really excellent ones is the willingness of claims offi cers to go beyond the strict confines of the policy language and take care of the customer’s problem. But even the most willing and able adjusters need something to work with if they’re going to help you. If you’ve grossly over-insured or under-insured your airplane, don’t blame the system. These guys are playing with shareholder’s money and there are limits to what they can do.
To avoid selling your airplane to your insurance company at a bargain price or being stuck with an airplane that has been rebuilt from a data plate, pay close attention to the insured value in your policy. Each year at renewal, review with your insurance provider the current Bluebook value and adjustments.
It helps if you know your airplane. Know how much time is on the engine, as well as how old it is. When describing the condition of the interior or paint, be realistic. It’s good to know when the airplane was last painted.
If you add equipment during the year, don’t wait until renewal to adjust the value. Call your insurer right away. As a rule of thumb, take half of what you paid for new avionics the first year and a third afterward and add it to insured value.
The value guides assume a midtime engine and typically give an hourly amount to credit or debit either side of that. If you overhaul an engine, add half the cost of the overhaul to the value of the airplane. In some cases, you shouldn’t wait until all the work is done. If you own a stack of radios which aren’t yet installed, call your provider to find out how to cover those items in case something happens to them before they’re installed in the airplane.
Some of the large invoices that we pay as aircraft owners are for capital improvements and some are for maintenance. When thinking about what your airplane is worth, separate the two. Don’t try to cover the cost of maintenance with insurance. If you have to change all the hoses at overhaul, or a cylinder or two in between, that’s ordinary wear and tear stuff and probably won’t increase the value of the airplane. No one buying your airplane will pay a premium because your IO-520 has all six cylinders, or because two of those cylinders have really good compression. Insurance is meant to cover the cost of owning the airplane, not the cost of operating it.
Don’t fall in love with the price that you paid for your airplane. It may be worth more or less. Even airplanes are subject to the gravitational pull of depreciation. The myth that airplanes maintain their value forever is just that. The one guarantee is that an airplane’s value will change over time and you need adjust your insurance policy to match.
When thinking about what you will do if the airplane is destroyed or cannot be economically repaired, consider the costs that you will incur. You may have a substantial deductible. There may be avionics that you feel you need that the next airplane doesn’t have. If you were going to replace your airplane, would you want an airplane with collision avoidance and deicing equipment?
For many of us, there’s sales tax to pay and the inevitable cost of getting an airplane that’s new to you on its feet. We don’t suggest that you try to insure these things. But if you’re tempted to save a little premium by under-insuring, remember that there’s usually a substantial transactional cost to replace it.
While valuation is an inexact science, the important thing is that you insure your airplane for an amount that’s in the price range that a sane buyer would pay for it. Being off by five or even 10 per cent won’t be the end of the world. But being off by 30 per cent will very likely lead to major heartburn during the claims process, if there is one.
Don’t forget that the amount that you insure the airplane for not only determines the size of the check if it’s totaled, but often will decide the entire course of the claim. If you want the best odds on getting the airplane fixed when it should be fixed and scrapped when it should be scrapped, insure it for what you would expect to sell it for. Insurance is a bet and your best bet is to know how your policy reads and what your airplane is worth.
Exactly when a total loss occurs depends upon the language in your policy. There are three basic definitions in use and each has strengths and weaknesses.
The definition used by several companies says that a total loss exists when the cost to repair the airplane equals or exceeds the value in the policy. This definition is more tolerant of under-insuring than others, but also has the potential to allow some airplanes to be repaired when the owner would rather get a check and move on.
The second definition of total loss says that a total loss exists when the cost to repair the airplane, when added to its unrepaired value as salvage, equals or exceeds its insured value. This seems more balanced, but it also has problems. If the value of the airplane as salvage is high, even minor damage can put you over the top, and you can find yourself losing your airplane when it’s repairable.
The Avemco definition says that the airplane will be declared a total loss when the estimated cost to repair it reaches 70 percent of its insured value. This definition is less tolerant of under-insurance than either of the others, but it makes the most sense to us. We think that 70 percent is about the time the owner would usually rather get a check and start shopping for a replacement aircraft.
Jon Doolittle is an Aviation Consumer contributing editor and owner of Sutton James Insurance.
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