Arizona presents a unique set of home insurance risks that don't exist anywhere else in the country: haboobs that coat everything in fine dust and crack stucco, monsoon flash floods that swamp neighborhoods in minutes, and wildfires that can jump ridgelines with no warning. Knowing exactly what your policy covers — and where it falls short — is essential for any Arizona homeowner in Phoenix, Tucson, Scottsdale, Mesa, Chandler, Gilbert, Glendale, Flagstaff, or Prescott.
The 6 Standard Coverage Types in a Homeowners Policy
A standard HO-3 policy — the most common type in Arizona — is divided into six coverage categories:
| Coverage | What It Protects | Typical Limit | Included? |
|---|---|---|---|
| ADwelling | The physical structure of your home — walls, roof, built-in appliances, attached garage | Full rebuild cost (e.g. $350K–$700K+) | ✓ Standard |
| BOther Structures | Detached garage, fences, pool enclosure, guest house, sheds | Typically 10% of Coverage A | ✓ Standard |
| CPersonal Property | Furniture, electronics, clothing, appliances — anywhere in the world | 50–70% of Coverage A | ✓ Standard |
| DLoss of Use | Hotel, meals, and living expenses if your home is uninhabitable after a covered loss | 20–30% of Coverage A | ✓ Standard |
| EPersonal Liability | Legal defense + damages if someone is injured on your property or you cause damage to others | $100K–$500K | ✓ Standard |
| FMedical Payments | Medical bills for guests injured on your property, regardless of fault | $1K–$5K | ✓ Standard |
Arizona-Specific Hazards: What's Covered, What's Not
This is where Arizona homeowners need to pay close attention. Many of the state's most common disasters have coverage that surprises people — in both directions.
Wildfire damage to your home and personal property is covered under a standard HO-3 policy. However, if your home is in a high-risk wildfire zone (common in Flagstaff, Prescott, Sedona, and parts of North Scottsdale), some carriers are now excluding wildfire or adding large separate deductibles. Always verify your policy explicitly covers fire.
This is the #1 coverage gap for Arizona homeowners. Monsoon flash floods are incredibly common in Phoenix, Tucson, and the East Valley — and standard home insurance explicitly excludes flood damage. You need a separate flood policy through the NFIP or a private flood insurer.
Wind damage from haboobs is typically covered — broken windows, damaged roof tiles, and exterior damage. However, fine dust infiltration causing interior damage to HVAC systems, electronics, or appliances may be disputed by insurers. Document damage immediately after any significant dust storm.
Wind damage and hail from monsoon storms is typically covered under your dwelling and personal property coverage. Note: some Arizona policies now include a separate wind/hail deductible (1–3% of dwelling value) that applies instead of your standard deductible for these events specifically.
Termite damage, roof rat damage, and other pest-related damage are universally excluded from homeowners policies in Arizona. Pest treatment and prevention is considered routine home maintenance. Arizona has significant termite activity, especially in Tucson and the East Valley — separate termite bonds are strongly recommended.
Arizona's expansive clay soils shift with moisture, causing foundation cracks and structural movement. This is classified as "earth movement" and is excluded from standard policies. Homes in the Tucson basin and parts of the Phoenix metro are particularly susceptible. A separate earth movement endorsement may be available from some carriers.
Arizona has more flash flood fatalities per year than any other state. Standard homeowners insurance does NOT cover flood damage of any kind — not even an inch of water entering your home from a monsoon. If you're in a FEMA flood zone (check at msc.fema.gov) or in a low-lying area of Phoenix, Tucson, Mesa, or Chandler, a flood policy is essential. Policies start around $600–$900/year through the NFIP, and private alternatives are available through Insurely.
Optional Add-Ons Arizona Homeowners Should Consider
Flood Insurance
Essential if you're in a flood zone or low-lying area anywhere in Phoenix, Tucson, Mesa, Chandler, or Scottsdale. Available through the NFIP or private carriers. Usually requires a 30-day waiting period — don't wait until storm season.
Scheduled Personal Property (Jewelry, Art, Collectibles)
Standard Coverage C has sublimits for jewelry ($1,500–$2,500), firearms, and fine art. If you own valuable items, a scheduled property endorsement covers them at full appraised value with no deductible.
Extended / Guaranteed Replacement Cost
Standard dwelling coverage pays up to your policy limit. With Arizona's construction cost surge, many homeowners are finding their limits insufficient. Extended replacement cost coverage adds 25–50% above your limit if rebuild costs exceed expectations.
Umbrella Liability Policy
Standard liability limits ($100K–$300K) can be quickly exhausted in a serious lawsuit. An umbrella policy adds $1–$5 million of additional liability coverage for typically $200–$400/year and is especially valuable for homeowners with pools — common in Arizona.
Service Line / Equipment Breakdown
Covers repair or replacement of home systems — HVAC, electrical, plumbing — that break down from mechanical failure. Arizona's extreme heat puts enormous stress on AC systems; this add-on can prevent large out-of-pocket expenses.
Earth Movement Endorsement
For homes in areas with expansive soil or near geological activity, this adds coverage for foundation damage from soil movement — a common and expensive problem in parts of the Tucson basin and East Valley.
Arizona has one of the highest rates of private pool ownership in the country. Pools increase your liability exposure significantly — a drowning or pool injury can result in lawsuits that quickly exceed standard $100K liability limits. All Arizona homeowners with pools should carry at least $300K in liability coverage and seriously consider an umbrella policy. Some carriers also offer pool safety equipment discounts.
Replacement Cost vs. Actual Cash Value — A Critical Distinction
When you file a claim, how your insurer pays matters as much as whether the loss is covered:
- Replacement Cost Value (RCV): Pays to replace damaged property with new, equivalent items — no depreciation deducted. This is what you want.
- Actual Cash Value (ACV): Pays the depreciated value of what was damaged. A 10-year-old roof that would cost $18,000 to replace might only get you $7,000 at ACV. Cheaper premium, but a painful claims experience.
Most standard Arizona policies default to RCV for the dwelling and ACV for personal property unless you upgrade. Always confirm which applies to each coverage section of your policy.
Make sure you have the right coverage
We'll compare Arizona's top home insurance carriers — with coverage options specific to Arizona risks.
The Bottom Line for Arizona Homeowners
A standard HO-3 policy covers the most common perils — fire (including wildfire), wind, hail, theft, and liability. But Arizona's unique hazard profile means several of the state's most damaging events aren't covered by default: flash floods, soil movement, and pest damage are all excluded.
The most important steps for any Arizona homeowner are: confirm your wildfire coverage isn't excluded or limited, add flood insurance if you're in any low-lying or flood-prone area, and make sure your dwelling coverage reflects today's actual rebuild cost — not what it cost to build your home years ago.