Whether your Pennsylvania homeowners insurance covers a emergency electrician loss depends on three things: was the damage sudden and accidental (covered) versus gradual (excluded), did you maintain the system reasonably, and did you document the loss promptly with dated photos plus a licensed contractor's written assessment. This guide explains what to expect from Pennsylvania carriers, what documentation matters most, and where to push back if a claim is denied.
Pennsylvania homeowners-insurance basics for this niche
Standard Pennsylvania homeowners policies cover sudden and accidental electrical damage from lightning strikes and power surges (up to policy sub-limits, often $1,000-$5,000), but typically EXCLUDE damage from gradual wi...
The official Pennsylvania insurance regulator (www.insurance.pa.gov) is your best resource for consumer complaints, carrier ratings, and dispute mediation.
What's typically covered
- Sudden, accidental damage from a covered peril (fire, lightning, windstorm, falling objects, vandalism)
- Resulting damage to walls, floors, and personal property when the emergency electrician failure causes a secondary loss
- Loss-of-use additional living expenses if your home is uninhabitable during repairs
- Liability coverage if a contractor working on your home is injured (when they have their own coverage that primary-pays first)
What's typically NOT covered
- Wear and tear, deterioration, lack of maintenance — the most common denial reason
- Pre-existing damage that you should have known about
- Gradual leaks that have been seeping for weeks/months before discovery
- Cost of the failed component itself — most policies pay for resulting damage but not the broken pipe/panel/unit
- Code upgrades required during repair (unless you carry an "ordinance or law" endorsement)
- Damage from unpermitted DIY work performed before the loss
How to document a Pennsylvania emergency electrician claim
- Take photos and a 30-second video immediately — before any cleanup, repair, or contractor touches anything. Wide shots, close-ups, visible cause.
- Save the original receipt or warranty for the failed equipment if applicable. Insurers ask for it.
- Get a licensed contractor's written assessment stating the cause of loss in plain language. The phrase "sudden and accidental failure" matters; "wear and tear" or "end of life" hurts your case.
- Call your insurer within 48 hours. Most Pennsylvania policies have a notice requirement; missing it is a procedural denial.
- Keep an itemized list of everything damaged, with replacement costs from current online listings.
- Track every conversation — date, time, adjuster name, what was said. Email follow-ups are stronger than phone alone.
Deductibles and how they apply
Standard Pennsylvania policies typically have a $500–$2,500 base deductible. For named-storm or wind-and-hail losses, many Pennsylvania carriers apply a percentage deductible — usually 1–5% of dwelling coverage — which can be far higher than the base. Check your declarations page before assuming a claim is "worth it." A $3,000 loss with a $2,500 deductible nets you $500 after the claim hits your loss history and potentially raises your premium.
When to push back on a denial
If your claim is denied:
- Read the denial letter carefully — it must cite the specific policy provision used to deny
- Request the claim file in writing — you're entitled to it under most state insurance laws
- Get a second contractor opinion if the denial is based on "wear and tear"
- File a complaint with the Pennsylvania insurance regulator (www.insurance.pa.gov) — the carrier must respond to regulatory complaints
- Consider a public adjuster for losses above ~$10,000 — they take 10–15% but often net more
- Engage an attorney for bad-faith claim handling, especially if the denial contradicts the policy text
How PAElectricNow fits in
PAElectricNow is a referral directory — we connect you with a licensed emergency electrician contractor who provides the written assessment your insurer needs. The contractor's invoice, dated photos of the failure, and their professional opinion on the cause of loss are typically the strongest documentation for a claim. Call (800) 555-0417 to be matched.