Does Homeowners Insurance Cover Fence Damage?
How Fence Coverage Works
Fences are classified as other structures under your homeowners policy, which means they fall under Coverage B rather than your dwelling coverage (Coverage A). Coverage B protects structures on your property that are not physically attached to your main home, including fences, detached garages, sheds, gazebos, and retaining walls.
The standard Coverage B limit is 10% of your dwelling coverage amount. If your home is insured for $350,000, you have $35,000 in other structures coverage. This is a shared limit across all qualifying structures, not a per-structure amount. If a storm damages your fence and your detached garage in the same event, both claims draw from that single $35,000 pool.
Like dwelling coverage under an HO-3 policy, other structures coverage uses an open-perils format. This means your fence is covered against any cause of damage that is not specifically excluded in your policy. The practical result is broad coverage for sudden, accidental events and no coverage for gradual deterioration or excluded perils.
Covered Causes of Fence Damage
Wind and storms. High winds, severe thunderstorms, and tornadoes are among the most common causes of fence damage, and all are covered perils. Whether the wind physically blows fence panels down, snaps fence posts, or sends a neighbor's tree crashing into your fence line, the resulting damage is covered.
Fallen trees. If a tree falls onto your fence, your policy covers the fence repair regardless of whether the tree came from your property or your neighbor's. Your insurer may also pay a limited amount, typically $500 to $1,000, toward removing the tree itself. If the tree was healthy and fell due to a storm, it is a straightforward covered loss. If the tree was dead and your neighbor had been warned about it, you may be able to pursue a negligence claim against them separately.
Fire and lightning. Fence damage from fire or a direct lightning strike is fully covered. This includes damage from wildfires that reach your property line, accidental fires that spread from a neighbor's yard, and lightning strikes that split or ignite fence posts.
Vandalism. If someone intentionally damages your fence through graffiti, destruction, or other malicious acts, vandalism coverage applies. File a police report before contacting your insurer, as most companies require documentation of criminal activity for vandalism claims.
Vehicle impact. If a car, truck, or other vehicle crashes into your fence, your other structures coverage pays for the repair. This applies whether the driver is a stranger, a neighbor, or a member of your household. If the driver is identified and at fault, your insurer may pursue subrogation against their auto insurance to recover the claim payment.
Hail. Severe hail can crack, dent, or break fence materials, particularly wood and vinyl fencing. Hail damage to fences is covered under the same provisions as hail damage to your home.
What Is Not Covered
Aging and wear. A fence that deteriorates over time due to weathering, UV exposure, or simple age is not covered. Warped boards, faded paint, and general structural weakening from years of use are maintenance responsibilities, not insurable losses.
Rot and rust. Wood rot from moisture exposure and metal rust from oxidation are forms of gradual deterioration. Even if the rot or rust eventually causes the fence to collapse, the root cause is maintenance neglect, which is excluded.
Termites and pests. Pest damage of any kind is excluded from standard homeowners policies. Termites, carpenter ants, and wood-boring beetles can destroy wooden fences from the inside out, but the cost of repair or replacement falls entirely on the homeowner.
Flooding. If floodwater damages or washes away your fence, the loss is excluded from your homeowners policy. Flood insurance through the NFIP does cover some other structures, but coverage for fences under flood policies is limited. Check your specific flood policy terms for details.
Earthquakes. Ground movement from earthquakes that shifts fence posts or collapses sections requires separate earthquake insurance coverage.
Filing a Fence Damage Claim
Before filing a claim for fence damage, weigh the repair cost against your deductible. Many fence repairs cost between $500 and $3,000, which may not exceed or significantly exceed a $1,000 or $2,500 deductible. Filing a small claim can increase your future premiums by more than the claim payment itself.
If the damage is substantial enough to warrant a claim, document the damage with photographs from multiple angles. Get at least two written repair estimates from licensed fence contractors. Include measurements of the damaged sections, the type of fencing material, and the linear footage affected. Contact your insurer to report the loss and provide your documentation.
Your adjuster will inspect the damage and compare it against your policy terms. If the claim is approved, your insurer will issue payment for the covered amount minus your deductible. If you have replacement cost coverage, you may receive an initial payment at actual cash value and a supplemental payment after completing the repairs and submitting receipts.
Average Fence Repair and Replacement Costs
Wood privacy fence repair typically costs $300 to $1,800 depending on the number of panels and posts affected. Full replacement of a wood fence averages $15 to $35 per linear foot installed, so a standard 150-foot perimeter fence costs $2,250 to $5,250. Vinyl fencing runs $20 to $40 per linear foot, chain link is $10 to $25 per linear foot, and wrought iron ranges from $25 to $50 per linear foot. Knowing these costs helps you decide whether a claim is worth filing relative to your deductible and potential premium increase.
Homeowners insurance covers fence damage from sudden events like storms, fallen trees, fire, vandalism, and vehicle impact through your other structures coverage, but excludes damage from aging, rot, pests, and floods. Always compare the repair cost against your deductible before filing a claim to avoid unnecessary premium increases.