Quick answer: A serious wine collection is not adequately protected by a standard homeowners policy, which applies low sublimits and excludes spoilage from temperature or mechanical failure. Insure it on a scheduled or blanket wine endorsement at agreed value, with coverage for breakage, theft, and loss from a cooling-system failure.
Why Standard Coverage Falls Short for Wine
Wine is both valuable and fragile, and its value can appreciate substantially. A standard policy caps it at a low limit and typically excludes the perils that actually threaten a collection, breakage, and spoilage when a cellar’s cooling system fails. A dedicated approach protects both the bottles and their full market value.
How to Protect Your Cellar
- Obtain a professional valuation or appraisal of the collection
- Insure on a scheduled or blanket wine endorsement at agreed value
- Confirm coverage for breakage and accidental damage
- Include spoilage or mechanical-breakdown coverage for cooling failure
- Keep a current inventory with values and provenance
- Maintain your cooling and storage systems to reduce risk
Frequently Asked Questions
Does homeowners insurance cover my wine collection?
Only up to a low sublimit, and typically without coverage for spoilage or mechanical breakdown. A dedicated endorsement is needed for a serious collection.
What perils matter most for wine?
Breakage, theft, and spoilage from a temperature or cooling-system failure are the primary risks a proper policy should address.
Should I schedule my wine or use a blanket endorsement?
It depends on the collection. Exceptional individual bottles are often scheduled, while larger collections may be covered on a blanket basis at agreed value.
Does it cover spoilage from a cooling failure?
With the right endorsement, yes, loss from mechanical breakdown or power failure affecting your cellar can be covered.