What is a binder in real estate?
A binder, also known as a conditional receipt, is a temporary insurance contract that provides coverage during the gap between policies. Binders are usually valid for 30-90 days and protect the property until permanent insurance is in place.
How binders bridge the insurance gap
Here is an example of how binders work during a real estate transaction:
- Jane is selling her home to John.
- Jane’s insurance policy on the home terminates when she closes.
- However, John’s new policy with his insurance company doesn’t begin until the next day.
- To bridge this 1 day gap, John purchases a binder through his insurance agent effective on the closing date.
- The binder provides temporary coverage until John’s permanent policy kicks in the next day.
Without the binder, there would be no insurance on the home for that 1 day period between Jane’s policy ending and John’s new policy beginning. The binder eliminates this dangerous coverage gap.
Read more: 7 Things You Need To Consider Before Buying A Home. Really.
Why binders matter
Binders are important because insurance gaps frequently occur during real estate transactions. The closing date on a property sale often falls in between the end date of the seller’s policy and the start date of the buyer’s policy.
Without a binder in place, the property is vulnerable if a fire, storm damage, theft, or other incident happened during the gap. The uninsured loss would be devastating financially to the buyer, seller, or both parties.
However, a properly issued binder provides seamless protection throughout the transaction. For a relatively small fee, binders provide priceless peace of mind.
Key takeaways:
- Binders (conditional receipts) temporarily insure a property during gaps between insurance policies.
- They protect buyers and sellers from financial loss if something happens before permanent insurance takes effect.
- Binders are a smart, affordable way to avoid getting stuck in insurance limbo during real estate transactions.