The difference between a payout and a rejection often comes down to one phrase. Learn how to identify the “14-Day Rule” in your policy.
You pay your premiums every month, assuming you are covered. Then you find mold behind your kitchen cabinets. You file a claim.
Three days later, you get a denial letter citing “Gradual Damage,” “Seepage,” or “Long-Term Leakage.” This is the most common exclusion in the insurance industry, and understanding it is the only way to fight it.
1. The Core Definition
Insurance is designed to cover accidents, not maintenance. The adjuster’s job is to determine if the damage happened instantly or over time.
An event that is abrupt, unexpected, and happens at a specific moment in time.
Example: A washer hose bursts at 2:00 PM on Tuesday.
💧 Gradual Damage
Damage that occurs slowly over time due to wear, tear, or lack of maintenance.
Example: A P-trap under the sink drips slightly for 6 months, rotting the cabinet.
2. The “14-Day Rule”
Most policies (ISO HO-3) contain language stating that coverage is excluded if water has been leaking for “a period of weeks, months, or years.”
In practice, many insurers interpret this as the 14-Day Rule. If the leak existed for more than 14 days before you reported it, they can deny the claim—even if you didn’t know about it.
3. The “Hidden from View” Exception
This is your best defense. Some policies have an exception for “hidden” leaks.
If the pipe was behind a tiled shower wall, a reasonable homeowner could not have known about the leak or performed maintenance on it.
You must argue: “The damage was hidden within the plumbing walls and was not visible until the mold manifested on the exterior drywall on [Date].”
4. What NOT to Say (The Adjuster Trap)
When you call to file a claim, everything is recorded. Using the wrong “time words” can trigger an automatic denial algorithm.
- “It’s probably been leaking for a while.”
- “I noticed a smell a few weeks ago but ignored it.”
- “The pipe looked rusty/old.”
- “I discovered the water suddenly on [Date].”
- “The damage appeared abruptly.”
- “This was a sudden failure of the pipe.”
5. Buying Back Coverage
If you live in an older home, standard coverage is risky. You can often add a “Limited Mold Coverage” endorsement (rider) to your policy.
- Cost: Usually $50 – $100 per year.
- Coverage: Typically provides $5,000 to $10,000 for mold remediation, even if the cause was somewhat gradual (check specific policy wording).
- Strategy: If you don’t have this, call your agent immediately to add it before a problem occurs.