Title insurance is unlike any other kind of insurance coverage. While most insurance policies are protecting against
future risks, a title policy provides protection from the consequences of past events. And unlike other types of insurance,
you make only one premium payment for a lifetime of coverage.
Title Insurance Protects Your Right of Ownership
Title insurance protects the title – which is the legal document evidencing a person's right to or ownership of a property
-- to a property from legal challenges that might arise before the property was purchased.
Common Title Defects
If the title of a property is checked to be ‘clear’ each time the property transfers from one owner to another, why is
title insurance required by lenders and recommended for anyone buying a property? That is because there are
common hidden risks that can cause a loss of title or create an encumbrance on title:
- Instruments (documents) executed under invalid or expired power of attorney
- Undisclosed or missing heirs
- Mistakes in recording legal documents by municipal or county government
- Misinterpretations of wills
- Deeds by persons of unsound mind, by minors or by persons supposedly single, but in fact married
- Fraud
- Liens for unpaid estate, inheritance, income or gift taxes
- Forged deed, releases or wills
Title insurance protects the purchaser of the property from claims arising from any one of those events if the event took place before the property was purchased.
Two Types of Title Insurance Policies
Anyone who has a financial interest in the property should have title insurance. On most residential properties,
there are two parties who should have coverage: the lender and the homeowner.
The lender needs protection only for the amount of the loan. The homeowner should also have an owner’s policy for the purchase price of
the home. Anyone buying a home should discuss this with their attorney. Ask whether or not it makes sense to add
a survey endorsement or an inflation rider to the owner’s policy. Be sure to read the title commitment before the policy is
issued to find out what restrictions apply.