Force-placed insurance is coverage obtained by the servicer or lender when required property insurance appears to be missing or lapsed.
Force-placed insurance is coverage obtained by the servicer or lender when required property insurance appears to be missing, insufficient, or lapsed.
Force-placed insurance matters because borrowers sometimes assume insurance issues are only a shopping-stage concern. In reality, maintaining required coverage remains important after closing too.
It also matters because this type of coverage is usually not the same as the borrower’s preferred insurance arrangement. From the borrower’s perspective, it often appears as an expensive servicing consequence of a coverage problem.
Borrowers encounter force-placed insurance after closing, during servicing, if the lender or servicer concludes that required hazard-related coverage is not in place.
The term becomes practical when the borrower receives notices about missing coverage, proof-of-insurance requirements, or premium charges tied to lender-placed protection.
A homeowner allows the normal homeowners policy to lapse and does not provide replacement proof of coverage. The servicer then places insurance on the property to protect the lender’s collateral position.
Force-placed insurance differs from Homeowners Insurance because homeowners insurance is the borrower’s ordinary property policy, while force-placed insurance is coverage imposed by the lender or servicer after a coverage failure.
It also differs from Hazard Insurance because hazard insurance is the general coverage concept lenders expect, while force-placed insurance is the servicing response when acceptable coverage is missing.