Evacuation: Wildfire Evacuation: Paying to Move the Collection

I live in California. In 2025, the “Skyline Fire” came within 2 miles of my home. I paid a specialized transport company $4,000 to emergency haul my four classic cars to safety. My house didn’t burn. When I submitted the towing bill to my insurer, they said, “Since there was no loss (fire damage), there is no claim.”

Key Takeaways

  • “Preservation of Property” Clause: Most policies require you to protect property from imminent danger, but they don’t always pay for the cost of doing so unless specified.
  • Wildfire Defense Services: High-end carriers (AIG/Chubb/PURE) have programs that will pick up your cars for free if you are in a threatened zone.
  • Reimbursement Limits: Some policies cover “Emergency Removal” up to $500. A 4-car hauler costs way more than that.
  • Timing: You must move them before the mandatory evacuation order. Once the road is closed, the trucks can’t get in.

The “Why” (The Trap): Expense vs. Loss

Standard policies indemnify you for “Direct Physical Loss.” Moving the cars prevents a loss, but the movement itself is an expense.
Unless the policy has an “Emergency Evacuation Expense” endorsement, you are technically saving the insurance company money out of your own pocket.

[IMAGE: Photo of an enclosed car hauler loading a Porsche 911 with smoke in the background]

The Investigation: I Called Them

I checked who pays for the tow truck when the fire is coming.

1. Hagerty

  • Feature: “Coverage for Evacuation.”
  • The Deal: They often cover a significant portion of the cost to move the vehicle if it is in an area under “imminent danger” (Civil Authority warning).
  • Verdict: Excellent.

2. Chubb

  • Feature: “Wildfire Defense.”
  • The Deal: They don’t just pay; they send their network to do it. You have to enroll beforehand.
  • Verdict: The VIP treatment.

3. State Farm / Allstate

  • The Deal: Generally no coverage for the tow unless the car was actually damaged.
  • Verdict: You pay the $4,000 to save your cars.

Comparison Table

CarrierPays for Evacuation?Limit
Standard AutoNo (Usually)N/A
HagertyYesCheck Limit (often reasonable costs)
Chubb / AIGYes (Service included)High / Unlimited

Step-by-Step Action Plan

  1. Check the “Imminent Danger” Clause: Does your policy cover “Emergency Removal Expense”?
  2. Pre-Register: If you have Chubb or AIG, you must sign a “Right of Entry” form now, so their teams can enter your property when you aren’t there.
  3. Keep the Warning: Save the screenshot of the “Red Flag Warning” or “Evacuation Order” from the county. You need to prove the threat was real.
  4. Network: Have the number of a private transport company saved. During a fire, Uber Towing won’t work.

FAQ Section

Does this apply to hurricanes?
Yes. “named Storm” evacuation coverage exists. You usually have to move the cars before the storm warning becomes a “Watch.”

What if the transport truck crashes?
Your policy covers the car while in transit. The transporter’s insurance is primary, yours is secondary.

Can I drive them myself?
Yes, but insurance won’t pay you for your time or gas. They only reimburse professional vendors.

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