Wind and hail coverage in coastal South Carolina is more complicated than most homeowners realize, and the confusion usually starts with deductibles. There isn’t just one wind deductible; there’s often a named-storm deductible and a separate, broader wind/hail deductible, and knowing the difference matters when a claim happens.
Two Different Deductibles, Not One
Most coastal SC homeowners policies have two distinct wind-related deductibles:
- Named-storm deductible: Applies specifically when damage occurs during a storm officially named by the National Hurricane Center. This is usually a percentage of your dwelling coverage (commonly 1-5%).
- Wind/hail deductible: A separate, often lower, deductible that applies to wind or hail damage from events that are not officially named storms, like severe thunderstorms, straight-line winds, or hail events.
Some policies combine these into a single “wind/hail” deductible that applies regardless of whether a storm was named; others keep them separate. Reading your declarations page, or having your agent walk you through it, is the only way to know which structure your policy uses.
When Wind/Hail Coverage Is Excluded Entirely
In some higher-risk coastal areas of South Carolina, particularly barrier islands and certain immediate-coastline zones, standard carriers may exclude wind and hail coverage from the homeowners policy altogether. When that happens, coverage is typically obtained separately through the South Carolina Wind and Hail Underwriting Association (the “SC Wind Pool”), a state-created insurer of last resort for wind and hail risk in designated coastal areas.
How to Tell If You’re in a Wind Pool Area
Wind Pool eligibility is based on specific geographic boundaries defined by the state, generally covering the immediate coastline and barrier islands. Not every coastal SC property is in a Wind Pool zone; many Mount Pleasant and mainland Charleston-area homes are not, while certain island and immediate-coastline properties are. We can tell you definitively whether your address falls inside the boundary.
Why This Matters When You’re Shopping Coverage
If you’re comparing homeowners quotes, two policies with similar premiums can have very different wind/hail structures underneath. One might bundle wind/hail into the standard policy; another might require a separate Wind Pool policy layered on top. Comparing “apples to apples” means looking past the premium and understanding exactly how wind and hail claims would actually be paid.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is my wind/hail deductible the same as my named-storm deductible?
Not necessarily. Many coastal SC policies have two separate deductibles: one that applies only during officially named storms, and a separate, often different, one for other wind or hail events. Check your declarations page or ask your agent to confirm which structure applies to you.
What is the SC Wind Pool, and do I need it?
The South Carolina Wind and Hail Underwriting Association provides wind and hail coverage for properties in designated high-risk coastal zones where standard carriers won’t include it in the base homeowners policy. Whether you need it depends entirely on your property’s specific location within the state-defined boundary.
Does homeowners insurance cover hail damage the same way it covers wind damage?
Generally yes, hail and wind are usually covered under the same peril category and share the same deductible structure, but this varies by carrier and policy, so it’s worth confirming for your specific policy.
Can I combine a Wind Pool policy with my regular homeowners policy?
Yes, this is actually the standard setup for properties in Wind Pool zones. You’ll typically have a standard homeowners policy that excludes wind/hail, paired with a separate Wind Pool policy that covers it. We coordinate both so nothing falls through the gaps.
Not sure whether your coastal SC property is in a Wind Pool zone, or want your wind/hail deductible structure explained in plain terms? We’ll walk through it with you. Learn more on our Home Insurance or Flood & Hurricane Insurance pages, or call us at (843) 471-2621.
