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Natural window light · February 2026
Insurance · Reviewed Honestly

Every Policy Has a Story. We Read the Fine Print So You Don't Have To.

Clause-by-clause reviews for first-time homebuyers, freelancers, and parents who'd rather understand their coverage than wonder about it at 2 a.m.

47Policies Reviewed
12Coverage Types
0Paid Placements
Featured Reviews

The policies most people have questions about — opened up, clause by clause.

Each review starts with a real situation, moves through the actual policy language, and ends with a verdict you can act on.

A
Homeowners

HO-5 Open Perils Policy

Chubb Masterpiece

When my sister closed on her first house in Portland last March, she called me the night before signing to ask whether the HO-3 her lender required was "good enough." I spent two hours with the actual policy jacket. Here's what I found.

The HO-5 costs $18–$34 more per month than a standard HO-3 but covers personal property on an open-perils basis — meaning everything is covered unless explicitly excluded. For anyone with a home office, instruments, or jewelry, the math almost always works out.

What works

  • Open-perils personal property coverage — no named-peril gaps
  • Replacement cost (not ACV) for belongings without a depreciation haircut
  • Broader protection for high-value items without scheduling

Watch out for

  • Flood and earthquake remain separate riders regardless of tier
  • Premium uplift of ~22% over HO-3 baseline
Read Full ReviewFiled under: First Home · 9-min read
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Homeowners
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Disability
B
Disability

Short-Term Disability — Solo Plan

Guardian Life

I went freelance in 2021. Six months in, I sprained my wrist badly enough to miss three weeks of client work. I had no disability coverage. I rebuilt from that gap — and now I review every short-term plan I can get my hands on.

Guardian's solo STD plan pays 60% of your declared income after a 14-day elimination period, up to 26 weeks. For freelancers billing $5,000–$12,000/month, that's meaningful runway. The income-declaration process is more flexible than competitors — no W-2 required.

What works

  • No employer required — individual enrollment available
  • Income declaration accepts 1099s and bank statement averages
  • Benefit period extends to 26 weeks (most solo plans cap at 13)

Watch out for

  • 14-day elimination period means the first two weeks are unprotected
  • Mental health claims require separate documentation package
Read Full ReviewFiled under: Freelancers · 11-min read
A
Life Insurance

20-Year Level Term — $750K

Banner Life

Our second daughter arrived at 2:14 a.m. on a Tuesday. By Thursday I was reviewing our existing $250K term policy and realizing it was written for a household with one income and one child. Some math had changed. I spent a weekend with four policy jackets.

Banner Life's 20-year level term at $750K runs $38–$52/month for a healthy 34-year-old non-smoker. The conversion rider allows partial conversion to permanent coverage without re-underwriting — critical if your health changes. The accelerated death benefit for terminal illness is included at no additional cost.

What works

  • Conversion rider included — no additional underwriting if health changes
  • Accelerated death benefit (terminal illness) at no cost
  • Level premiums locked for full 20-year term

Watch out for

  • No return-of-premium option available at this face amount
  • Underwriting can take 3–6 weeks for face amounts over $500K
Read Full ReviewFiled under: Family Coverage · 13-min read
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Life Insurance
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6 yrReading policy jackets so you don't have to
The Reviewer

Marcus Webb

Independent Insurance Analyst · Chicago, IL

I spent four years as a claims adjuster before going independent. I've read over 400 policy jackets in six years — not to sell them, but to understand exactly where coverage ends and disputes begin.

Underwrite has no affiliate relationships with insurers. Every grade reflects my honest read of the policy language against the premium asked. I accept no advertising from the companies I review.

400+ Policies

Read in full

Licensed

P&C Adjuster, IL

Zero Affiliates

No paid placements

Quick Comparisons

Side by side. No jargon.

These snap verdicts summarize the full review. Each "winner" is context-dependent — click through for the nuance.

Homeowners
Clear Winner
HO-3 Special FormvsHO-5 Comprehensive

Better personal property coverage for home offices

Term Life
Clear Winner
10-Year Termvs20-Year Term

Locks rate before health changes; worth the premium

Disability
Clear Winner
Employer Group STDvsIndividual Own-Occ

Portable and protects your specific job duties

Health
Context
Bronze HDHP + HSAvsSilver PPO

Depends on annual utilization — read the calculator

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Recent Reviews

From the desk, lately.

All Reviews
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B+
Renters

Renters Insurance in 2026: The Coverage You Actually Need

Most renters underestimate replacement cost by 60%. Here's how to set your limit correctly and which riders are worth the extra $4/month.

Feb 18, 2026· 7 min read
Read Full Review
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A
Liability

Umbrella Liability: The $1M Policy Nobody Talks About

At $15–$30/month, a $1M umbrella policy is the highest ROI insurance purchase most middle-class households never make.

Health insurance enrollment forms spread across a desk with a calculator and highlighted passages
C
Health

COBRA vs. ACA Marketplace: What Nobody Tells You About the 60-Day Window

COBRA is almost always the wrong choice, but there's a specific situation where it wins. I ran the numbers across three scenarios.

Elderly couple reviewing insurance documents together at a kitchen table with warm morning light
B
Long-Term Care

Long-Term Care Insurance: Is the Window Already Closing?

Premiums have increased 40–80% for existing policyholders over the past decade. I looked at the five carriers still writing new business.