Insuring Your Household Help
If you hire household help, make sure to get the appropriate insurance
coverage.
Contracting with an outside firm

If you need a nurse, physical therapist, cook or other professional
to work in your home, you may decide to contract with a business
that provides these types of workers.
- Determine if the person is your employee or the employee of
the firm you hired. In most cases, the worker will be the "employee"
of the organization.
- Ask the firm for a copy of its certificates of insurance. This
provides documentation that the firm provides workers compensation
insurance for its employees. If the firm also offers health and
disability insurance, you can feel comfortable that any worker
injured on your property will receive medical treatment.
Occasional workers

If you occasionally hire a baby-sitter to take care of your children
or a young person in your neighborhood to rake leaves or clean the
garage, you should talk to your insurance professional.
- Find out how much liability coverage you have in your homeowners
or renters policy and determine whether it is adequate. Generally,
most policies start at $1 million worth of coverage.
- Consider getting more liability insurance. You may elect to
raise the amount or buy more coverage through an umbrella liability
policy. This would provide broader coverage and a minimum of $1
million of liability insurance.
- Learn about the no-fault medical coverage you have in your homeowners
policy. If someone, other than an immediate family member, is
injured on your property, you can submit their medical bills directly
to your insurance company for reimbursement. Most people buy $1,000
worth of this coverage. You may consider raising the amount to
$2,500 or $5,000.
Permanent full or part-time employees

If you hire someone to work in your home on a permanent, regularly-scheduled
basis, you should consider purchasing a workers compensation policy
for this person. This provides coverage for medical care and physical
rehabilitation for an employee who is injured on the job and for
lost wages if the employee is severely hurt and no longer able to
work. It also provides death benefits.
- Call your state department of insurancefor the name
and telephone number of the agency that administers workers compensation
in your state.
- Find out if your state requires employers to provide workers
compensation for "domestic" employees.
- Determine what the requirements are for this coverage to be
mandatory. For instance, some states may require an employer who
hires a certain number of employees to buy workers compensation.
In other states, the determination might be based on the number
of hours an employee would work.
- If you're required under state laws to buy workers compensation
insurance and you fail to do so, your homeowners insurance policy
will not pay for any fines, court awards or any other penalties
against you.
Auto insurance

If the person working for you is going to drive your car to pick
up groceries or take an aging parent to the doctor, make sure that
your insurance company knows about the additional driver. With Permission © Insurance
Information Institute, Inc. - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED -
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