Calculate your windstorm deductible before filing a claim. Adjust limits, rates, and minimums in seconds. Get a clean breakdown, plus exports for your records.
| Basis | Deductible Terms | Claim | Deductible | Estimated Payout |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dwelling limit: 300,000 | 2% of base, no caps | 15,000 | 6,000 | 9,000 |
| Dwelling limit: 400,000 | 1% of base, min 2,500 | 8,000 | 4,000 | 4,000 |
| Total insured value: 500,000 | 3% of base, max 12,000 | 40,000 | 12,000 | 28,000 |
| Custom base: 250,000 | Flat deductible 2,500 | 6,000 | 2,500 | 3,500 |
Windstorm deductibles are often a percentage rather than a flat fee. Many coastal and high‑risk areas use 1% to 5% of a base. A 2% term on a 300,000 base equals 6,000 out of pocket. Flat deductibles still appear, but percentage triggers are common after named‑storm losses and severe wind events.
Policies may apply the percent to the dwelling limit, total insured value, or another schedule. This calculator lets you choose the base so the estimate matches your declarations page. If Coverage A is 350,000 and the policy uses that amount, 1.5% produces 5,250. If the carrier uses 500,000 total insured value, the same 1.5% becomes 7,500, raising your cash requirement.
Minimums and maximums can reshape results. A minimum deductible of 2,500 means small percent calculations rise to that floor. A maximum cap, such as 10,000, prevents high bases from creating extreme windstorm retentions. Use the optional cap fields to model these rules. When caps apply, the effective deductible percentage against the base will differ from the stated percent.
Deductibles reduce the payment on each covered claim. If the claim is 4,000 and the windstorm deductible is 6,000, the payout is zero and you pay the entire repair cost. For a 25,000 claim with a 6,000 deductible, the estimated payout is 19,000. Turning on comparison shows how a standard 1,000 deductible could have produced 24,000, highlighting the windstorm tradeoff.
Accurate documentation helps during budgeting and claim conversations. Export the calculation to CSV to share with a spreadsheet or adjust scenarios quickly. Use the PDF to keep a dated snapshot of inputs, the deductible basis, and the estimated payout. Save multiple exports at renewal, because changes to limits and bases can shift the windstorm deductible by thousands. Keep exports with photos and repair bids.
It is the amount you pay before coverage applies for windstorm damage. Many policies set it as a percentage of a stated base, so your out-of-pocket cost can be higher than a standard flat deductible.
Use the same base named in your policy: dwelling limit, total insured value, or a scheduled amount. If you are unsure, check the declarations page or ask your agent to confirm the deductible basis.
A minimum raises small calculated deductibles to a floor. A maximum limits very large deductibles to a ceiling. When caps apply, the effective percentage may differ from the stated windstorm percentage.
If the deductible is greater than or equal to the claim amount, the insurer payment is zero under this estimate. You still pay repair costs, and the claim may not be economical to file.
No. It is a planning tool based on your inputs. Coverage rules, exclusions, storm definitions, and adjuster findings can change the deductible application and the final settlement amount.
Save a PDF for each scenario you review, plus a CSV if you want to compare many cases in a spreadsheet. Keep the exports with your policy declarations and any repair bids for reference.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.