I’d echo the above. You’ll save money and time by not buying the warranty in the first place. The problem is that “warranty” does not mean the same thing as all other warranties you’re used to. It almost always means a “pre-approved repair contractor”. So they can choose to repair stuff or give you some money to repair it yourself and they decide when and how much that amount is.Of the many things to check and compare, one is their obligation to replace defective components with "like kind," and what exactly "like kind" means.
If you have really expensive appliances, for example, you may or may not get the same one for a replacement. Or you might have a nice ceiling fan, or bath faucet, but get what they call "contractor grade" (or some-such similar term), which generally means the cheapest thing they can find. If you want a better replacement, you pay the difference. Just make sure you're clear on how your warranty works in this regard.
Also keep in mind that the competition is fierce, so they pay their contractors as little as possible, sometimes just the $75 per-incident fee. Since successful local contractors won't have a need to participate in home warranty servicing, you'll likely end up with a contractor that cannot keep booked on his own merit. That's putting it nicely, you can fill in the blanks. That also means that his portion of the repair cost may or may not cover what he needed to do a good job. So he might cut corners to make up the difference, and/or try to up-charge you to sell you another part or service on which he can make a reasonable profit. For example, for some reason, a water heater replacement always seems to need some sort of code-mandated upgrade. And your current heater likely does not have a proper frazzlehopper valve, so you'll need one of those, too! If you don't know what a frazzlehopper valve is, it's the same component you'll often see itemized on your shady auto-repair bill!!!
As you can surmise, I went through a few warranty companies and ended up firing them all, and now do the repairs myself, or hire a good, reputable local contractor when the work is outside my skill set. So far, I'm slightly ahead, dollar-wise, and waaaaay ahead quality-of-work-wise. YMMV.
+3. I stopped counting when I broke $25k in savings years ago. It's probably $45k by now and I just scoffed at $4200 for a 3 year brand new furnace warranty (disguised as $119 a month for 3 years of coverage) and about that for a new SUV.You’ll save money and time by not buying the warranty in the first place
Of the many things to check and compare, one is their obligation to replace defective components with "like kind," and what exactly "like kind" means.
If you have really expensive appliances, for example, you may or may not get the same one for a replacement. Or you might have a nice ceiling fan, or bath faucet, but get what they call "contractor grade" (or some-such similar term), which generally means the cheapest thing they can find. If you want a better replacement, you pay the difference. Just make sure you're clear on how your warranty works in this regard.
Also keep in mind that the competition is fierce, so they pay their contractors as little as possible, sometimes just the $75 per-incident fee. Since successful local contractors won't have a need to participate in home warranty servicing, you'll likely end up with a contractor that cannot keep booked on his own merit. That's putting it nicely, you can fill in the blanks. That also means that his portion of the repair cost may or may not cover what he needed to do a good job. So he might cut corners to make up the difference, and/or try to up-charge you to sell you another part or service on which he can make a reasonable profit. For example, for some reason, a water heater replacement always seems to need some sort of code-mandated upgrade (whether it does or not!). And your current heater likely does not have a proper frazzlehopper valve, so you'll need one of those, too! If you don't know what a frazzlehopper valve is, it's the same component you'll often see itemized on your shady auto-repair bill!!!
As you can surmise, I went through a few warranty companies and ended up firing them all, and now do the repairs myself, or hire a good, reputable local contractor when the work is outside my skill set. So far, I'm slightly ahead, dollar-wise, and waaaaay ahead quality-of-work-wise. YMT
Thanks, this is really good advice! It's kind of where I'm ending up after researching people's experiences online.Of the many things to check and compare, one is their obligation to replace defective components with "like kind," and what exactly "like kind" means.
If you have really expensive appliances, for example, you may or may not get the same one for a replacement. Or you might have a nice ceiling fan, or bath faucet, but get what they call "contractor grade" (or some-such similar term), which generally means the cheapest thing they can find. If you want a better replacement, you pay the difference. Just make sure you're clear on how your warranty works in this regard.
Also keep in mind that the competition is fierce, so they pay their contractors as little as possible, sometimes just the $75 per-incident fee. Since successful local contractors won't have a need to participate in home warranty servicing, you'll likely end up with a contractor that cannot keep booked on his own merit. That's putting it nicely, you can fill in the blanks. That also means that his portion of the repair cost may or may not cover what he needed to do a good job. So he might cut corners to make up the difference, and/or try to up-charge you to sell you another part or service on which he can make a reasonable profit. For example, for some reason, a water heater replacement always seems to need some sort of code-mandated upgrade (whether it does or not!). And your current heater likely does not have a proper frazzlehopper valve, so you'll need one of those, too! If you don't know what a frazzlehopper valve is, it's the same component you'll often see itemized on your shady auto-repair bill!!!
As you can surmise, I went through a few warranty companies and ended up firing them all, and now do the repairs myself, or hire a good, reputable local contractor when the work is outside my skill set. So far, I'm slightly ahead, dollar-wise, and waaaaay ahead quality-of-work-wise. YMMV.
Yeah, we wouldn't buy one left to our druthers, but the owners have offered to buy one, so trying to figure out what company to use.I’d echo the above. You’ll save money and time by not buying the warranty in the first place. The problem is that “warranty” does not mean the same thing as all other warranties you’re used to. It almost always means a “pre-approved repair contractor”. So they can choose to repair stuff or give you some money to repair it yourself and they decide when and how much that amount is.
First American Home WarrantyWhat warranty provider do you use?
Ask them to instead give you a check for 1/2 of the warranty fee and go have a nice dinner. You’ll be way ahead.Yeah, we wouldn't buy one left to our druthers, but the owners have offered to buy one, so trying to figure out what company to use.