The fine print that bites: vacancy and unoccupancy
Many homeowners policies limit or exclude certain coverages when a home sits empty beyond a stated period — commonly somewhere in the 30-to-60-day range, though it varies by carrier and policy form. Vandalism and water damage are the coverages most often restricted. The fix is rarely expensive; it's usually about telling your insurer the truth about how the home is used so the policy is written for a seasonal home rather than a primary one. What gets people isn't the seasonal use — it's the mismatch between the policy and reality, discovered at claim time.
Vacant vs. unoccupied (insurance-speak decoder)
Unoccupied means the home has your furniture and belongings; you're just not there — the normal snowbird situation. Vacant means empty of contents, like a house between owners. Vacant is the harsher category with tighter restrictions. Most seasonal Tucson homes are unoccupied, not vacant, and it's worth using the right word when talking to any insurer.
The leave-town checklist that actually matters
- Shut off the water at the main. The single highest-value five minutes of your departure day. A supply-line failure with nobody home for two months is the classic catastrophic seasonal claim.
- Line up eyes on the house. A home-watch service, a trusted neighbor, or family — someone who walks inside every week or two, and after every big monsoon storm. Some carriers ask about this; all of them like it.
- Keep minimal cooling on. Tucson attic temperatures cook adhesives, electronics, and drywall. Around 85–88°F is a common compromise setting.
- Consider a leak sensor or smart water shutoff. Inexpensive, and some carriers offer credits for them.
- Document before you go: a quick video walkthrough dates the home's condition — useful if you ever need to show a storm did the damage, not a slow leak.
Green Valley, SaddleBrooke, and the east side
Seasonal living is so common in Green Valley and SaddleBrooke that local underwriting is genuinely used to it — this is a routine conversation, not a confession. If your seasonal home is a manufactured home, as many in Green Valley are, the same vacancy logic applies through the manufactured-home programs, and we handle both sides of that regularly.
The honest summary
Seasonal homes don't cost wildly more to insure. They just need the policy to match the truth: how long you're gone, who checks the house, how the water is managed. Get those three things stated correctly and you've closed the gaps that cause the horror stories.
Tell us your dates and who watches the house — we'll make sure the policy matches your real life, both seasons.