The Recommendation
Recommended limit
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umbrella coverage
TIER
YOUR ONE-LINE READING
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Your numbers
Tier comparison — the standard $1M / $2M / $5M / $10M ladder
Most carriers price umbrella in tiers with declining marginal cost. The first $1M is the most expensive; each additional $1M is materially cheaper. The Institute observation: for a household at $2M-$5M net worth, the cost difference between $1M and $5M of umbrella is often $300-$500/year — the cheapest "expected value" insurance available.
Underlying-limits check — the umbrella floor
Umbrella only attaches above the underlying auto/home limits. If your underlying limits are below the carrier's required floor (typically $250K/$500K auto, $300K-$500K home), the umbrella refuses to pay until you "self-insure" up to its floor. We check your current limits against the standard requirements.
Excess-judgment math — why $300K underlying isn't enough for HNW
Jury Verdict Research and Verdict Search data over the past decade show clear patterns in serious-injury awards. Median jury awards by injury class:
The deep-pocket reality. Plaintiff attorneys assess defendant net worth before filing. A household with $5M of net worth and $300K of auto liability is a known target: the attorney can win a $2M+ judgment, collect the $300K from insurance, and pursue the remaining $1.7M from personal assets via wage garnishment, lien on home (above homestead exemption), brokerage account attachment, and forced asset liquidation. An umbrella policy collapses this risk back to the policy limit.
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Methodology & caveats
The "umbrella >= net worth + future earnings" rule ›
Why this rule? A civil judgment can attach to (a) all current assets above state exemption limits, (b) future wage income via garnishment for the life of the judgment (typically renewable every 5-10 years and good for 10-20 years), and (c) future inheritance or windfalls. An umbrella policy needs to cover the full economic exposure, not just the current asset base.
The PV-of-future-earnings shortcut: annual gross income × years to retirement × 0.6 (rough discount and self-consumption adjustment). A 40-year-old earning $250K with 25 years to retirement: 250 × 25 × 0.6 = $3.75M of exposure on top of current net worth.
Upsize for visibility: public figures, athletes, executives, and physicians often face premium-jury-multiplier effects. Standard upsize is 1.5×-2.0× the base rule.
Why the first $1M is the most expensive (and the rest is cheap) ›
Actuarial frequency falls off steeply above $1M. Per claim-frequency data, most "umbrella-attaching" losses sit between $300K (underlying limit) and $1.5M. Losses above $5M are rare enough that the carrier is essentially pricing the right-tail catastrophic-event probability — very low frequency, very high severity.
Typical pricing curve (preferred HNW carriers, no claims history):
- First $1M: $250-$400/year
- $1M to $2M: +$80-$150/year
- $2M to $5M: +$200-$350/year
- $5M to $10M: +$400-$700/year
Going from $2M to $5M of coverage typically costs $200-$350/year of additional premium. For a $5M-net-worth household, this is the cheapest expected-value insurance you can buy.
Underlying limits — the umbrella floor problem ›
Umbrella policies do not pay until the underlying auto, home, and watercraft liability limits are exhausted. They also require the underlying limits to meet the carrier's specified floor. Typical requirements:
- Auto: $250K/$500K bodily injury (split limits) or $300K combined single limit. For high-profile or HNW households, $500K/$1M is common.
- Home: $300K-$500K personal liability. HNW carriers (Chubb, Pure, Cincinnati) default to $1M.
- Watercraft (over 25 ft): Separate liability policy with $500K minimum.
- Recreational vehicles, motorcycles: Often excluded from standard umbrella; require separate "broadening" endorsement.
If your underlying limit is $100K but the umbrella requires $250K, the gap from $100K-$250K is a "self-insured retention" — you pay it out of pocket before umbrella attaches. The fix: raise the underlying limit. The marginal cost of raising auto from $100K/$300K to $250K/$500K is usually $30-$80/year. Always do it.
Attractive-nuisance riders — pools, trampolines, dogs, teens ›
Carriers underwrite specific exposures. Each adds premium and changes coverage:
- Pools: Drowning is the leading cause of injury death for children 1-4. Carriers require fencing, alarms, and may exclude diving boards. +15-25% premium.
- Trampolines: Many carriers will not write the policy if a trampoline is on premises. Those that will require enclosure netting. +10-20% premium, or coverage exclusion.
- Dogs of "restricted breeds": Carrier-specific lists, but commonly include Pit Bull, Rottweiler, Doberman, German Shepherd, Chow, Akita, Husky, Wolf hybrids. Most carriers exclude bite liability or charge 20-40% extra.
- Teen drivers: Add to the auto policy AND notify the umbrella carrier. Premium increase 25-50%. Worth it — teen drivers are the highest-frequency accident demographic.
- Airbnb / VRBO: Standard HO-3 excludes commercial-use injury. Requires specific endorsement (most carriers offer a "rental endorsement") or a separate commercial liability policy. Failure to disclose voids coverage.
- Board service: Director-and-officer liability is NOT covered by personal umbrella. Add a separate D&O policy for any board you serve on, especially nonprofits and HOAs.
The Institute rule: disclose everything. The premium impact is usually trivial; the consequence of non-disclosure is a denied claim at the worst possible moment.
Carrier selection — Chubb, Pure, Cincinnati vs Geico/State Farm ›
This is the rare topic where carrier selection matters as much as coverage amount. The HNW-specialist carriers (Chubb, Pure, Cincinnati Insurance, AIG Private Client Group) underwrite differently than the mass-market carriers (Geico, State Farm, Allstate, Progressive):
- Claims defense: HNW carriers retain top defense counsel and litigate aggressively. Mass-market carriers settle within policy limits and walk away — if the judgment exceeds your limit, the carrier is gone and you face the excess alone.
- Replacement-cost guarantee: HNW carriers offer guaranteed replacement (or "extended replacement") on the home; mass-market caps at policy limit even if your $2M home cost $2.6M to rebuild.
- Worldwide coverage: HNW carriers extend liability worldwide; mass-market is usually US-only.
- Pricing: HNW umbrella from Chubb at $5M often costs $400-$700/year. The same amount from Geico can be cheaper but with materially worse claims service.
For households above $1M net worth, the HNW-specialist carriers are usually worth the modest premium difference. For households above $5M net worth, the mass-market carriers are essentially malpractice.
Disclosure. Not investment, tax, or insurance advice. We are not your advisor. This tool produces an educational planning estimate. Premium ranges, underlying-limit requirements, and rider impacts are rough industry-average indicative values as of early 2026; actual carrier pricing and coverage rules vary by state, carrier, claims history, and underwriting cycle. Median jury award data is composite from Jury Verdict Research, Verdict Search, and the National Center for State Courts; awards in your jurisdiction may differ materially. Always obtain quotes from 3+ independent agents (HNW specialists for households above $1M net worth) and have an attorney or fiduciary insurance consultant review policy language, exclusions, and underlying-limits requirements before relying on coverage. The Baratelli Institute does not sell insurance products and does not earn commissions on any referral.