Does Homeowners Insurance Cover Identity Theft

Updated June 2026
Standard homeowners insurance does not cover financial losses from identity theft, but many policies include or offer an identity theft endorsement that reimburses expenses related to restoring your identity. This endorsement typically covers costs like lost wages, legal fees, notary expenses, and credit monitoring, with limits of $15,000 to $25,000. It does not reimburse stolen money or fraudulent charges, which are handled by your bank and credit card companies.

What Identity Theft Coverage Actually Covers

Identity theft coverage in homeowners insurance is not what most people expect. It does not replace stolen money, reverse fraudulent charges, or compensate you for the financial damage a thief causes using your identity. What it covers are the out-of-pocket expenses you incur while restoring your identity and cleaning up the mess the thief created.

Covered expenses typically include lost wages for time taken off work to deal with identity theft issues (filing police reports, meeting with creditors, appearing in court), attorney fees if you need legal help disputing fraudulent accounts or clearing your name, phone calls, postage, and notary fees for correspondence with credit bureaus and creditors, fees for obtaining copies of credit reports beyond your free annual entitlement, and loan re-application fees if you need to reapply for credit that was denied because of fraudulent activity on your record.

Some endorsements also cover credit monitoring services for one to three years after the incident, the cost of placing and removing fraud alerts or credit freezes, and expenses related to dealing with government agencies (Social Security Administration, IRS, DMV) when the thief has used your identity for benefits or tax fraud.

What Identity Theft Coverage Does Not Cover

The most important limitation is that identity theft coverage does not reimburse the money stolen from you. If a thief drains your bank account, maxes out your credit cards, or opens new accounts in your name and runs up charges, the identity theft endorsement does not pay those losses. Federal law already protects consumers in most of these scenarios: the Electronic Fund Transfer Act limits liability for unauthorized debit card transactions to $50 if reported within two days, and the Fair Credit Billing Act limits credit card liability to $50 per card (and most card issuers waive even that). Your bank and credit card companies are the first line of defense for fraudulent transactions, not your homeowners insurance.

The endorsement also does not cover losses from business-related identity theft (a thief using your business tax ID or business credit), investment losses caused by identity theft, damage to your credit score (which is not a quantifiable financial loss for insurance purposes), or the emotional distress of being victimized.

How much does identity theft coverage cost?
Many homeowners insurers include basic identity theft coverage ($15,000 to $25,000 in expense reimbursement) as a standard part of the policy at no additional cost. If your policy does not include it, an endorsement typically costs $25 to $60 per year. Some insurers offer enhanced identity theft packages with higher limits ($50,000 to $100,000), dedicated case managers who handle the restoration process for you, and broader expense coverage for $100 to $200 per year.
Is a separate identity theft protection service better than the insurance endorsement?
Standalone identity theft protection services (LifeLock, Identity Guard, Aura, and similar products) typically cost $10 to $30 per month and combine credit monitoring, dark web scanning, identity restoration assistance, and insurance coverage. The insurance component of these services overlaps with the homeowners endorsement but often provides higher limits ($1 million is common). The monitoring and proactive detection features are the main value of standalone services, while the homeowners endorsement is purely reactive, covering expenses after theft has already occurred. If you want active monitoring and early detection, a standalone service adds value beyond what the insurance endorsement provides.
Does homeowners insurance cover stolen mail or documents?
Physical theft of mail, documents, or personal records from your home is covered under the theft peril in your standard homeowners policy, but only for the replacement cost of the physical items (paper, folders, etc.), which is negligible. The information contained in those documents has no assigned dollar value for property insurance purposes. If the stolen documents lead to identity theft, the identity theft endorsement would then cover the expenses of restoring your identity, but the initial theft of the physical items provides essentially no meaningful payout.

Filing an Identity Theft Claim

To file an identity theft claim under your homeowners policy, you typically need to file a police report (required by most insurers and also helpful for disputing fraudulent accounts), notify the Federal Trade Commission at IdentityTheft.gov (which generates a recovery plan and an Identity Theft Report), contact the three major credit bureaus (Equifax, Experian, TransUnion) to place fraud alerts or credit freezes, and document all expenses you incur during the restoration process with receipts and records of time spent.

Keep detailed records from the moment you discover the theft. Log every phone call with the date, time, representative name, and reference number. Save copies of all correspondence. Track your time away from work, including the specific hours and what you were doing. The insurer will require documentation for every expense you claim, and thorough record-keeping from the start prevents disputes during the claims process.

Reducing Your Identity Theft Risk

Prevention reduces both the likelihood and the cost of identity theft. Freeze your credit with all three bureaus (free since 2018 under federal law), which prevents anyone from opening new credit accounts in your name without your explicit authorization. Use strong, unique passwords for every financial account and enable two-factor authentication wherever available. Monitor your bank and credit card statements weekly for unauthorized transactions. Shred documents containing personal information before discarding them. Be cautious with emails, phone calls, and text messages requesting personal information, even if they appear to come from legitimate organizations.

The IRS Identity Protection PIN program allows you to obtain a six-digit PIN that must be included on your tax return, preventing someone else from filing a fraudulent return using your Social Security number. Tax-related identity theft, where a thief files a tax return in your name to collect the refund, is one of the most common and disruptive forms of identity theft.

Key Takeaway

Homeowners insurance identity theft coverage reimburses the expenses of restoring your identity, not the money stolen from you. With limits of $15,000 to $25,000 and costs of $25 to $60 per year (or included free), the endorsement provides a reasonable safety net for restoration expenses. For proactive monitoring and detection, a standalone identity theft protection service adds value the insurance endorsement cannot match.