I strongly recommend getting earthquake insurance, no matter where you live. Earthquakes powerful enough to be felt by people have occurred in 40 of the 50 states, according to the United States Geological Survey. Not surprisingly, Alaska, California, and Hawaii lead the nation in frequency and size of earthquakes, but other states have significant numbers of quakes as well. For example, New York had 25 perceptible earthquakes from 2005 to 2007. Maine had 12, and Tennessee had 10. From Florida (2) to Washington (18), America is earthquake country.
The chances of a major earthquake may be small, but the risks to your finances are huge. Should your home be badly damaged, your home value will go down, meaning you will not have home equity to draw on to pay to repairing or rebuilding. Your regular homeowners insurance will not pay for earthquake damage to the structure or belongings due to shaking (but will pay for fire damage and water damage from burst pipes). In California, limited dwelling protection is available through "mini-policies" backed the California Earthquake Authority (CEA), a governmental agency. These will pay for damage to your home, but not non-essential structures such as swimming pools.
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