Georgia Wind and Hail Deductibles: What Your Policy Actually Says

If you have not read the deductible section of your Georgia homeowners policy closely, there is a reasonable chance you are carrying more out-of-pocket risk than you realize. Specifically, most Georgia homeowners policies have a separate wind and hail deductible that operates differently from the standard deductible on your declarations page.

How percentage deductibles work

A percentage deductible is calculated as a percentage of your dwelling coverage limit, not a fixed dollar amount. It applies separately to wind and hail claims, which happen to be the most common large claims in North Atlanta.

On a home with $400,000 in dwelling coverage, a 1 percent wind and hail deductible means you pay the first $4,000 on any wind or hail claim. A 2 percent deductible means you pay the first $8,000. A 2 percent deductible on a $600,000 home means $12,000 out of pocket before your insurer contributes anything.

Why Georgia uses percentage deductibles

Georgia carriers adopted percentage deductibles to manage the high frequency and severity of hail claims in the region. North Atlanta sits in a hail-prone corridor. Gwinnett, Cherokee, Forsyth, and Fulton counties all see multiple significant hail events most years. Carriers responded by shifting more of the smaller claim cost to the policyholder through percentage deductibles.

What to check on your policy

Look for a section labeled Wind, Windstorm, or Wind and Hail on your declarations page. You may see a separate deductible amount or a percentage. If you see a percentage, multiply it by your dwelling limit to calculate your actual out-of-pocket exposure on a wind or hail claim.

Some carriers offer lower percentage deductibles or fixed dollar alternatives at a higher premium. Whether that tradeoff makes sense depends on your home value, your savings, and your risk tolerance. We walk through this as part of every coverage review.