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This is what was left of my shop after a fire a few years ago. I will tell you my experience with my insurance company and you can draw your own conclusions. We lived on a rural acreage consisting of a house, the barn/shop and some other outbuildings. We had insurance with Farmers Mutual. The barn was finished inside and included a metalworking and woodshop plus storage. Needless to say, it was a total loss. I also lost a 1968 SS396 Chevelle that I was restoring. The car was insured with Grundy and they paid the agreed value on the car. I had pictures of everything in the barn plus receipts for most of the items. This is very IMPORTANT! I had REPLACEMENT value for the contents, also VERY IMPORTANT! I had to inventory everything that was destroyed and determine the cost to replace the various items. Without the pictures, there was no way that I could have recalled all the tools and other items that were lost. After the inventory was completed, I gave it to them and they gave me the OK to begin replacing the items. If I decided not to replace an item, they would only pay 60% of the replacement value in cash, so I replaced just about everything, even if I no longer needed it. I had some antique and collectable items, mainly antique woodworking tools. They paid 100% cash for these items. It took several months, some negotiating and a lot of time, but I finally replaced everything (almost $110,000 worth if tools). I had the building insured for $40,000 and was paid that. A little low but that was my fault.
The only loss that wasn't covered were the parts that I had acquired for the Chevelle restoration, something in the fine print that I didn't pick up on.
All in all, it was a positive experience with Farmers Mutual. Again, take what you want from my story, but I cannot imagine not having insurance.