I currently pay about $1000 per year for homeowners insurance with replacement cost coverage, contents, plus a $1M umbrella policy. Our house appraises at about $97k. Replacement cost is about $185K. I've spent about $17k on insurance over the past 21 years. We have tens of thousands of dollars in furniture, clothing, appliances, electronics, jewelry, art, antiques, tools, tractor (hello TBN), etc... Anyone that advises people to not buy homeowner's insurance in a blanket statement has not thought about other peoples' situation, and/or doesn't have much to lose, and/or has the means to absorb the loss. Most people do not own multiple dwellings and would have to rent or move in with family or friends while repairs are made. My insurance also covers rent while repairs are made.
While we have enough cash to pay for a house if this one is destroyed, it would consume about 5-6 years of my income.
Then throw in someone suing your for, say, tripping on your steps and hitting their head, your dog nipping their hand when they surprise touched it wrong and causing nerve damage, you're kids' friends riding YOUR kid's bike and wiping out, your gas water heater exploding due to a gas leak and wiping out 4-5 neighbors' houses.... I could go on. I personally know 3 of the 4 above case scenarios and folks that lived in the gas explosion neighborhood in the 4th.
So, say NO to self insurance for most people. In most cases, it is foolish. Very very foolish. The savings are minimal compared to the losses that could occur and its money well spent. One catastrophic lawsuit and your family's future can be altered significantly.
Just my opinion, of course. Run the numbers yourself for your personal situations. Do a spreadsheet. Tornado/hurricane/flood/wildfire, comes through and wipes your house, shop with living quarters, your camper, generator, and your 2nd house on the back 40 and you'll be screwed no matter how much you saved.
Good luck with that!
