Personal Insurance
At Strux, we know that protecting your personal assets is just as important as safeguarding your business. That’s why we offer personal insurance solutions including home and auto coverage designed for professionals in the architecture, engineering, and construction industries. Whether you’re insuring a home you’ve worked hard to build or a vehicle you rely on every day, we help you get the right protection without the usual hassle or upsell.
Our approach is personal, not transactional. We’ll work with you to tailor coverage based on your lifestyle, assets, and risk tolerance ensuring you’re fully covered without overpaying. Whether you’re looking to bundle home and auto or simply want a smarter policy from someone who understands your world, Strux delivers straightforward coverage with the same professionalism and clarity you expect in your business.

The FAQs of Personal Insurance
What is personal insurance?
Personal insurance is coverage designed to protect individuals and households from financial loss due to events like accidents, injuries, property damage, lawsuits, illness, disability, or death. It typically includes home, auto, umbrella, renters, condo, life, and disability coverage.
What types of personal insurance are most common?
Common personal insurance policies include:
- Auto insurance
- Homeowners insurance
- Renters insurance
- Condo (HO-6) insurance
- Personal umbrella insurance
- Life insurance
- Disability insurance
- Health insurance (often separate from property/casualty)
Some people also add specialty coverage like flood, earthquake, valuable items, or identity theft coverage.
What does personal insurance typically cover?
Personal insurance can help cover:
Damage to your home or personal property (home/renters/condo)
Liability if you’re responsible for injuring someone or damaging property
Auto accidents (liability and physical damage)
Loss of use/temporary living expenses after a covered home loss
Income replacement (disability insurance)
Coverage depends on the specific policy, limits, deductibles, and exclusions.
What is the difference between personal insurance and business insurance?
Personal insurance protects you and your household. Business insurance protects business operations and liabilities. If you’re a sole proprietor (including many consultants), some activities can blur the line—especially working from home, driving for work, or using personal equipment for business.
Do architects and engineers need personal insurance if they have business coverage?
Often, yes. Business insurance (like professional liability (E&O) and general liability) does not replace personal insurance. Personal coverage protects your household assets, and it can matter if you have higher income or assets that increase your exposure to lawsuits.
What is personal liability coverage?
Personal liability coverage (usually in homeowners/renters/condo policies) helps if you’re sued for unintentionally causing bodily injury or property damage to others. It can cover legal defense and settlements up to policy limits, subject to exclusions.
What is an umbrella policy, and who needs one?
A personal umbrella policy provides extra liability limits above your home and auto policies. It is often considered when you have:
- Higher income or assets
- Teen drivers
- A pool, trampoline, dog-bite exposure, or frequent entertaining
- Rental properties
For architects and engineers, umbrella coverage can be a practical way to protect personal assets outside the business.
How much personal liability coverage should I carry?
Many people start with higher base limits on home and auto (often $300k–$500k or more) and then add a $1M+ umbrella depending on net worth, lawsuit exposure, and risk tolerance. The right limit depends on your household profile and assets.
What does an umbrella policy not cover?
Umbrella policies commonly exclude:
- Intentional acts
- Business/professional activities (unless endorsed)
- Some personal injury categories depending on wording
- Certain high-risk exposures without underlying coverage
Always confirm exclusions and required underlying limits.
What is the difference between replacement cost and actual cash value?
Replacement cost pays to replace items with new equivalents (subject to policy terms).
Actual cash value (ACV) factors depreciation.
This difference can materially change claims payouts for personal property and building components.
What is a deductible, and how do I choose one?
A deductible is what you pay out of pocket before insurance pays. Higher deductibles usually lower premiums but increase your upfront cost during a claim. Choosing a deductible often depends on emergency savings and your tolerance for smaller losses.
What is “loss of use” coverage in homeowners or renters insurance?
Loss of use can help pay for additional living expenses (temporary housing, increased food costs, etc.) if your home is uninhabitable due to a covered claim. Limits and time periods vary.
Does homeowners insurance cover home office equipment?
Sometimes, but often with limitations especially for business property or business activities. If you work from home (common for consultants), you may need endorsements or separate coverage for business equipment and liability.
Does personal auto insurance cover business driving?
It depends on how you use the vehicle. Many personal auto policies cover commuting and personal errands, but frequent business use (client visits, jobsite travel) may require disclosure or a commercial policy. Misclassification can cause claim issues.
Is personal insurance required by law?
Some forms effectively are:
- Auto liability is required in most states
- Lenders typically require homeowners insurance on mortgaged properties
Other coverages (umbrella, renters, life, disability) are optional but often recommended based on financial exposure.
How much does personal insurance cost?
Cost depends on location, property value, driving history, credit-based insurance scores (where allowed), coverage limits, deductibles, claims history, and household risk factors (drivers, pets, pools, etc.). Bundling home and auto can reduce premiums in some cases.
What affects homeowners insurance premiums the most?
Major drivers can include:
- Rebuild cost (not just market value)
- Roof age and condition
- Location risks (wind, wildfire, hail, crime, distance to fire services)
- Claims history (including prior owners in some cases)
- Deductible level and coverage endorsements
Is flood damage covered by homeowners insurance?
Usually not. Flood is typically excluded and often requires a separate flood policy (through NFIP or private insurers). Water damage from plumbing leaks is a different category and may be covered, subject to exclusions and maintenance issues.
Does homeowners insurance cover earthquakes?
Usually not without a separate earthquake policy or endorsement (availability depends on state). Earthquake coverage often has separate deductibles and limits.
What should I do right after a personal insurance claim event?
Priorities typically include ensuring safety, preventing further damage when reasonable, documenting the scene (photos/receipts), and notifying the insurer promptly. Keep records of temporary repairs and additional living expenses.
How do I avoid coverage gaps in personal insurance?
Common steps:
- Review limits annually (especially liability and dwelling rebuild cost)
- Confirm endorsements for valuables, water backup, and special perils
- Match umbrella requirements with underlying home/auto limits
- Disclose home office and business driving accurately
- Update policies after life changes (marriage, new drivers, renovations)
What is the best way to structure personal insurance if I own an architecture or engineering firm?
Many owners coordinate:
- Higher personal liability limits + umbrella
- Correct auto usage classification for jobsite and client travel
- Proper home office coverage (if applicable)
- Separate personal vs. business property schedules
This helps avoid claim disputes where personal and business exposures overlap.
How often should I review my personal insurance?
At least annually, and anytime you have a major change such as moving, renovations, adding drivers, buying expensive items, starting a side business, or changes in income/assets.
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