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Does Insurance Cover Water Damage? The Honest Map
The short answer
Texas homeowners policies cover sudden and accidental water discharges — burst lines, failed appliances, AC overflows — including the resulting damage to your home. They exclude gradual leaks, neglected maintenance, rising floodwater (separate flood policy), and usually sewer backups (separate endorsement). Nearly every disputed claim is a fight over "sudden vs. gradual," and that fight is decided by documentation: discovery date, photos, immediate action, and a professional moisture map.
The two words the whole policy turns on
Open any Texas homeowners policy to its water language and you will find some version of "sudden and accidental discharge." Those words are the gate:
Covered (typically):
- Burst supply lines and connectors — washer hoses, toilet lines, faucet lines
- Water heater ruptures and sudden appliance failures
- AC condensate overflows — the sudden-event version
- Pipe bursts, including freeze events (with reasonable-care caveats)
- The resulting damage: drywall, flooring, cabinets, ceilings, belongings — and usually the cost of tearing out and replacing what's needed to access the failed pipe
Excluded (typically):
- Gradual leaks and seepage — the "continuous or repeated over a period of weeks/months" language; the slow icemaker line and the wax ring that wept all year live here
- Maintenance neglect — the corroded valve everyone saw, the 15-year-old hoses
- The failed part itself — insurance pays for what the water did, not the new water heater or the plumbing repair
- Flood — rising water from outside is a separate policy, full stop (and in Houston, a serious conversation to have before hurricane season)
- Sewer backup — see the trap below
- Mold — covered only within strict sub-limits, and generally only when it results from a covered loss that was handled promptly. Which is the coverage-side argument for same-day drying.
The sewer backup trap
The exclusion that ambushes the most Houston homeowners: sewage backing up through drains is not covered by the standard policy — it requires a "water backup" endorsement that costs relatively little and must exist before the loss.
The two-minute homework this page assigns: find your declarations page, look for water/sewer backup coverage. Missing? Call your agent this week. No other paragraph on this site has a better cost-to-protection ratio.
How the gray areas actually get decided
Twenty years of walking losses with adjusters reduces to this: the materials testify. A burst hose shows clean water lines, uniformly wet materials, sharp edges. A months-long seep shows rust rings, layered tide marks, delamination, rot, established mold. Adjusters read that record — it is most of the job.
Which means the sudden-vs-gradual verdict is substantially written before the adjuster arrives, by what you did at discovery:
- A dated discovery — photos and video from the day you found it
- Immediate action — the mitigation call the same day; policies require you to prevent further damage, and delay reads as neglect and grows the loss
- A professional moisture map — extent-at-discovery, on paper, from someone whose meters don't negotiate
- The failed part, preserved — which also opens the door to the deductible coming back (subrogation)
The full sequence: the first 24 hours checklist.
Filing smart: three practical notes
- Know the scope before deciding to file. A loss that meters at $1,800 against a $2,500 deductible is not a claim; a loss that meters at $14,000 is. You cannot make that call by eyeballing a stain — the extent is a measurement.
- Describe the event, don't narrate theories. "The line failed; I found it at 7 a.m. Tuesday and shut the main" is complete. Speculating "it might've been dripping a while" writes the carrier's denial for them — accuracy, not creativity, just precision about what you actually know.
- You choose your contractors in Texas — mitigation and rebuild both. Insurer-preferred vendors can be fine; just remember whose volume relationship they protect. Judge any mitigation outfit on one artifact: daily moisture logs to dry standard.
Where we fit
Mitigation done right serves the claim twice: it stops the loss from growing (the covered staying covered), and it produces the file — source documentation, moisture maps, drying logs, photos — that the adjuster's decision rests on. It is the part of this business we came from. Claim questions, live loss or hypothetical: (346) 385-3496, and we will tell you what we would do, free.
Coverage Questions
What water damage does homeowners insurance cover in Texas?
Sudden and accidental discharges: burst pipes and supply lines, appliance failures, water heater ruptures, AC overflows — plus the resulting damage to your home. The plumbing repair itself and the failed appliance are usually excluded; it is the damage the water did that's covered.
What water damage is NOT covered?
The standard exclusions: gradual leaks and seepage ('over a period of time' language), maintenance neglect, flood and rising surface water (separate flood policy), sewer backup without its endorsement, and mold beyond strict sub-limits. Most coverage fights are about pushing a loss from the covered column into one of these.
Is flood damage covered by homeowners insurance?
No — rising water from outside (storm surge, overflowing bayous, sheet flooding) is excluded from essentially all homeowners policies and requires separate flood insurance through NFIP or private carriers. In Houston, where bayou flooding is a fact of life, this is the most important gap to know about before storm season.
Is sewer backup covered?
Usually only by optional endorsement — 'water backup' coverage added to the policy for a modest premium. Many Texas homeowners discover the gap only while standing in the loss. Check your declarations page today; if the endorsement isn't there, call your agent this week.
What does 'sudden and accidental' actually mean in a claim?
It is the line between 'a pipe burst Tuesday' (covered) and 'a pipe seeped since spring' (excluded). In practice the adjuster reads the evidence: rust rings, layered staining, and rot say gradual; clean edges, wet materials, and a dated discovery with immediate action say sudden. Your documentation is your side of that argument.
Will filing a water damage claim raise my rates?
Claims history affects pricing and, in Texas, insurers commonly use CLUE reports going back years — so frequency matters. A reasonable rule: claims well below or near your deductible aren't worth filing; significant structural losses are exactly what the policy is for. Decide with real numbers, which means knowing the actual scope — metered, not eyeballed.
Is it worth filing a water damage claim with my insurance, or should I just pay out of pocket?
File it if the damage exceeds your deductible by a comfortable margin — say $3,000+ over a $1,000 deductible. Document everything: photos, timeline, receipts. One claim doesn't automatically spike rates in Texas. The real cost of not filing: untreated water becomes mold, which becomes a bigger problem. Get it dried and remediated fast regardless.
My AC drain pan overflowed and soaked my ceiling. Does that count as 'sudden and accidental'?
Depends on *why* it overflowed. If the pan cracked or the drain line clogged overnight — yes, covered. If the condensate line was blocked for weeks and you never cleaned the filter — no, that's maintenance neglect. The adjuster will inspect the AC unit and check service records. Don't delay the drying while you wait for the decision; water damage gets worse fast in Houston humidity.
Not sure how serious it is?
Text a photo of what you’re seeing to Maven Mitigation and we’ll tell you whether it needs professional drying or you can handle it yourself. Local to Houston, no call centers.
Call or text (346) 385-3496 [email protected]