View Full Version : Life Insurance Coverage in Experimental Aircraft?
Carl Orton
December 15th 07, 10:18 PM
It's Saturday, so I haven't had a chance to call my agent, but my wife 
brought up a question that may nix me building an airplane.
If I die in my homebuilt aircraft, does my life insurance pay out?  My 
policy covers me if I pilot an aircraft, but for the life of me I have no 
idea if there's an assumption / stipulation that it applies only to 
type-certificated aircraft.
Thanks;
Carl
Ron Wanttaja
December 15th 07, 10:23 PM
On Sat, 15 Dec 2007 15:18:32 -0600, "Carl Orton" > wrote:
> It's Saturday, so I haven't had a chance to call my agent, but my wife 
> brought up a question that may nix me building an airplane.
> 
> If I die in my homebuilt aircraft, does my life insurance pay out?  My 
> policy covers me if I pilot an aircraft, but for the life of me I have no 
> idea if there's an assumption / stipulation that it applies only to 
> type-certificated aircraft.
Depends on the policy.  My personal policy doesn't exclude flying in
experimental aircraft (I made that a primary point when purchasing), but my work
one does if the plane isn't company-owned.
Ron Wanttaja
Scott[_1_]
December 15th 07, 10:48 PM
My work policy is the same...no coverage in any private aircraft.
Scott
Ron Wanttaja wrote:
> On Sat, 15 Dec 2007 15:18:32 -0600, "Carl Orton" > wrote:
> 
> 
>>It's Saturday, so I haven't had a chance to call my agent, but my wife 
>>brought up a question that may nix me building an airplane.
>>
>>If I die in my homebuilt aircraft, does my life insurance pay out?  My 
>>policy covers me if I pilot an aircraft, but for the life of me I have no 
>>idea if there's an assumption / stipulation that it applies only to 
>>type-certificated aircraft.
> 
> 
> Depends on the policy.  My personal policy doesn't exclude flying in
> experimental aircraft (I made that a primary point when purchasing), but my work
> one does if the plane isn't company-owned.
> 
> Ron Wanttaja
-- 
Scott
http://corbenflyer.tripod.com/
Gotta Fly or Gonna Die
Building RV-4 (Super Slow Build Version)
Carl Orton
December 15th 07, 11:47 PM
Well, I was able to check the work policy from the online summary plan 
description.  Good news is that I can fly as PIC for work or recreation ONLY 
if it's a type-certificated aircraft.  Which shoots a big stinkin' hole in 
my plans for a homebuilt.      :-(
Of course, I'll lose the work coverage in the next 2 yrs or so because I 
plan on early retirement, so it may be a moot point; I'm sure it'll take me 
at least 2 yrs to build, so......
>>>It's Saturday, so I haven't had a chance to call my agent, but my wife 
>>>brought up a question that may nix me building an airplane.
>>>
>>>If I die in my homebuilt aircraft, does my life insurance pay out?  My 
>>>policy covers me if I pilot an aircraft, but for the life of me I have no 
>>>idea if there's an assumption / stipulation that it applies only to 
>>>type-certificated aircraft.
>>
>>
>> Depends on the policy.  My personal policy doesn't exclude flying in
>> experimental aircraft (I made that a primary point when purchasing), but 
>> my work
>> one does if the plane isn't company-owned.
>>
>> Ron Wanttaja
Lou
December 16th 07, 12:50 AM
Check with the sales rep. One policy I looked at specifically asked
if I was involved in experimental aircraft. I tore up the form
                Lou
December 16th 07, 03:30 AM
If you are an AOPA member you can get D&D coverage for any aircraft
related accident for reasonable price.
Scott[_1_]
December 16th 07, 03:52 AM
<arnold schwartzenegger mode on> Dooo it! </arnold schwartzenegger mode 
off>  I've always figured if I die in the crash, WTF do I really care if 
the policy is good or not??  I have other things in place to take care 
of family.  Fly what you want to fly!  Life is too short for compromises :)
Scott
Carl Orton wrote:
> Well, I was able to check the work policy from the online summary plan 
> description.  Good news is that I can fly as PIC for work or recreation ONLY 
> if it's a type-certificated aircraft.  Which shoots a big stinkin' hole in 
> my plans for a homebuilt.      :-(
> 
> Of course, I'll lose the work coverage in the next 2 yrs or so because I 
> plan on early retirement, so it may be a moot point; I'm sure it'll take me 
> at least 2 yrs to build, so......
> 
> 
> 
>>>>It's Saturday, so I haven't had a chance to call my agent, but my wife 
>>>>brought up a question that may nix me building an airplane.
>>>>
>>>>If I die in my homebuilt aircraft, does my life insurance pay out?  My 
>>>>policy covers me if I pilot an aircraft, but for the life of me I have no 
>>>>idea if there's an assumption / stipulation that it applies only to 
>>>>type-certificated aircraft.
>>>
>>>
>>>Depends on the policy.  My personal policy doesn't exclude flying in
>>>experimental aircraft (I made that a primary point when purchasing), but 
>>>my work
>>>one does if the plane isn't company-owned.
>>>
>>>Ron Wanttaja
> 
> 
> 
-- 
Scott
http://corbenflyer.tripod.com/
Gotta Fly or Gonna Die
Building RV-4 (Super Slow Build Version)
Ron Wanttaja
December 16th 07, 09:24 AM
On Sat, 15 Dec 2007 22:54:51 -0800, Richard Riley >
wrote:
> >Depends on the policy.  My personal policy doesn't exclude flying in
> >experimental aircraft (I made that a primary point when purchasing), but my work
> >one does if the plane isn't company-owned.
> 
> Really?  Mine doesn't.
> 
> The accidental death and dismemberment won't pay, but when I checked a
> couple of years ago experimental aircraft were not excluded.
You might be right; it's been ~15 or so years since I noticed the exclusion.  It
stuck in my mind as the policy *did* cover experimental aircraft accidents, as
long as it was a company-owned experimental.
Ron Wanttaja
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