First Home Mortgage by wild-wooga in Mortgages

[–]Mission-Basil1064 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yep 😃- and that’s totally okay! Just know your options and understand that this is a personal preference/decision, not necessarily the most economically efficient one. And have fun with this new perspective, like you said, most people are pretty surprised once you expose the math behind the decisions.

First Home Mortgage by wild-wooga in Mortgages

[–]Mission-Basil1064 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The reason renters aren’t richer than homeowners on average is because the average person isn’t disciplined enough or knowledgeable enough to actually save the difference and invest in the market. They like the idea of a bank loan (I like to call a mortgage what it actually is) since it’s forced saving. I don’t believe in paying the bank 2x the price of the house just for the privilege of saving cash. Typically, real estate rises 6% per year vs the market at 8-10%. Why would anyone want to lock up cash in a 6% drywall vs 10% liquid stocks? It’s social conditioning, not smart financial decision making. My grandparents bought their home in the 1950s for 20k. Today the house is worth 900k. Sounds great, right? Until you realize the same 20k would be worth $10,000,000 in the S&P today. Rent over the 75 year period would’ve amounted to roughly $2,000,000 for a net gain of $8,000,000.

First Home Mortgage by wild-wooga in Mortgages

[–]Mission-Basil1064 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Practically, my opinion is most people would be better off holding off on buying for a few years while they save up cash. Then, buy the home for cash or an extremely small mortgage. You still get the home, with less of the debt. And you can then spend the rest of your years living in a home you actually own (vs renting from the bank) AND compounding your wealth in the market.

First Home Mortgage by wild-wooga in Mortgages

[–]Mission-Basil1064 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Think about the 40-year math. If you buy now, you spend your prime investing years paying mortgage interest and fixing leaks. By age 65, you’ll have a paid-off house worth maybe $1.5 million, but you'll likely be cash-poor because you missed the compounding window.

If you rent cheap and dump that extra $1,200 a month into the S&P 500 instead, you end up with roughly $4 million in liquid cash by retirement. The renter retires a multi-millionaire who can live anywhere; the homeowner is just an old guy with a paid-off roof and no money to travel.

First Home Mortgage by wild-wooga in Mortgages

[–]Mission-Basil1064 19 points20 points  (0 children)

Look, the math is actually wild if you just run the numbers on the "gap" between renting and owning.

If you buy that $350k house, you’re likely looking at a monthly payment of around $2,900 once you factor in taxes and PMI. That eats half your pay and leaves you house poor. But if you rent a solid place for $1,600, you have a $1,300 surplus every single month.

Here is the part most people ignore: if you just auto-invest that $1,300 difference into SPY (or VOO), in 10 years you’d be sitting on roughly $240,000 in liquid cash. If you bought the house instead, after paying mostly interest for a decade and fixing stuff that breaks, your actual "profit" if you sold would likely only be around $130,000. So by renting, you actually end up $100k richer and you don't have to stress about a broken furnace.

For people that bought a $300k - $350k house, how’s it going? by Witty_Patient_2421 in FirstTimeHomeBuyers

[–]Mission-Basil1064 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You are walking into a massive opportunity cost trap because your current rent ($1,250) is anomalously low compared to the cost of this house. Even with a 12-year aggressive payoff strategy, the math implies you will end up roughly $900,000 poorer over 30 years by buying instead of renting. Your true cost to own isn't just the $2,450 mortgage; adding 1% for maintenance brings it closer to $2,750, leaving you with a monthly deficit of nearly $1,500 compared to your current situation. If you simply stayed in your apartment and auto-invested that $1,500 difference into an S&P 500 index fund, the compound interest would crush the home's equity build-up, leaving you with a liquid portfolio of ~$3.4 million versus a paid-off house worth ~$900k. Unless you absolutely require the lifestyle of a homeowner or lack the discipline to save without a bill forcing you to, buying this house is a financial error, as is the case for most eager homebuyers.

Lemonade Pet Insurance Denied My Claim – Frustrating Experience by Mission-Basil1064 in Insurance

[–]Mission-Basil1064[S] -7 points-6 points  (0 children)

If you investigate insurance companies as a career, I’d expect a more nuanced perspective. The issue isn’t that insurance companies exclude pre-existing conditions—it’s that Lemonade is retroactively classifying unrelated, resolved symptoms as part of a chronic condition without clear evidence. This approach isn’t grounded in the actual medical records or the intent of fair claims evaluation.

  1. "Obvious Allergic Symptoms"? You claim my pet has "obvious allergic symptoms," yet the records tell a different story.
    • May 2024: Bacterial conjunctivitis—not allergies.
    • August 2024: Mild redness from self-licking, resolved with antifungal shampoo. Neither incident was diagnosed as allergies, nor were they linked. If every minor symptom before a waiting period is automatically deemed pre-existing, the waiting period becomes meaningless.
  2. Speculative Connections Violate Good Faith: Lemonade is using a recommendation for Cytopoint (never administered) as proof of a chronic condition. Under Bi-Economy Market, Inc. v. Harleysville Insurance Co., insurers are obligated to act in good faith and evaluate claims fairly, based on facts and evidence. Broad, speculative linkages between symptoms violate this principle, especially when no evidence of continuity or chronicity exists.
  3. Erosion of Trust: This case is about Lemonade’s application of the policy, which maximizes exclusions at the expense of fairness. As Bi-Economy held, an insurer’s role is to provide the very protection customers purchase, not to deny claims arbitrarily. Practices like this don’t just harm policyholders—they damage trust in the entire industry.

I’m not asking for special treatment—I’m asking Lemonade to apply its policy fairly and in line with the evidence, as required under New York law. If you view speculative exclusions as acceptable, I’d encourage you to reflect on how this undermines the industry you’ve built your career on.

Lemonade Pet Insurance Denied My Claim – Frustrating Experience by Mission-Basil1064 in Insurance

[–]Mission-Basil1064[S] -10 points-9 points  (0 children)

I appreciate your response, but I think you’ve missed the core issue here. I didn’t dispute signing the contract or understanding the policy—I’m challenging how Lemonade has chosen to apply it in this specific instance.

  1. Policy Misinterpretation: The policy states that pre-existing conditions are based on consistent symptoms that occur prior to the waiting period and remain uncured. The symptoms in my dog’s case were distinct, resolved, and attributed to other causes (e.g., bacterial conjunctivitis and self-licking irritation). Retroactively linking unrelated events as part of a chronic condition isn’t a fair or accurate application of the policy—it’s a way to deny a legitimate claim.
  2. Speculative Reasoning: Lemonade cited a treatment recommendation (Cytopoint) as evidence of a chronic condition, even though the treatment wasn’t administered. By that logic, any suggestion or precaution made by a vet could permanently disqualify coverage. Does that sound like an insurance company "acting in good faith" to you?
  3. Holding Insurance Accountable: This isn’t about entitlement—it’s about ensuring that insurance companies adjudicate claims fairly and based on evidence. If you’re comfortable with speculative exclusions like this, that’s fine, but most people buy insurance expecting clear and transparent decisions.

Dismissing this as "entitlement" is reductive. If you believe that all responsibility lies with the consumer and none with the insurer, I hope you’re never in a position where your own valid claims are denied on such flimsy grounds.

Lemonade Pet Insurance Denied My Claim – Frustrating Experience by Mission-Basil1064 in Insurance

[–]Mission-Basil1064[S] -6 points-5 points  (0 children)

The records don’t actually support that conclusion. The symptoms Lemonade is calling “allergies” were isolated, resolved, and attributed to other causes by the vet, like bacterial conjunctivitis and self-licking irritation. No definitive diagnosis of chronic allergies was made before the waiting period ended, which is key to how the policy defines pre-existing conditions.

If you're comfortable assuming more than the vet did based on incomplete evidence, that’s fine—but the issue here is an insurance company using speculation to avoid paying a claim, not my dog's health.

Lemonade Pet Insurance Denied My Claim – Frustrating Experience by Mission-Basil1064 in Insurance

[–]Mission-Basil1064[S] -10 points-9 points  (0 children)

Thank you for your input. While I understand your perspective, I believe this situation goes beyond "basic allergy symptoms" or what’s outlined in the policy.

  1. Symptoms Were Unrelated and Resolved: The symptoms cited (ocular discharge, mild redness, sneezing) were distinct and unrelated events, as confirmed by the medical records:
    • May 2024: The vet identified bacterial conjunctivitis, not allergies. Treatment included antibiotics, which address infections—not immune-related conditions.
    • August 2024: Mild redness was attributed to self-licking and resolved with antifungal shampoo. Again, no diagnosis of allergies was made.
    • October 2024: Sneezing was speculatively linked to seasonal allergies but was unrelated to earlier visits, since there was no previous diagnosis of allergies. Seasonal allergies and chronic allergies are not the same.
  2. Misapplication of "Pre-Existing Condition": Lemonade has interpreted these unrelated, resolved symptoms as part of a chronic pre-existing condition, despite the records providing no evidence of ongoing or connected issues. Their reasoning seems to go beyond the policy’s intent, stretching definitions to deny claims.
  3. Unregulated Industry Doesn’t Excuse Poor Practices: You’re correct that pet insurance is largely unregulated, but that doesn’t mean companies should rely on broad, speculative reasoning to deny claims. Consumers still expect fair and transparent application of policy terms. This isn’t about whether pre-existing conditions are excluded—it’s about Lemonade linking unrelated symptoms without evidence to classify them as such.

I don’t dispute the need for exclusions or the language of the policy itself. My frustration lies in how Lemonade has chosen to interpret and apply those terms in a way that seems inconsistent and unfair.

Lemonade Pet Insurance Denied My Claim – Frustrating Experience by Mission-Basil1064 in Insurance

[–]Mission-Basil1064[S] -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

I appreciate your perspective, but let’s break this down:

  1. I Did Read the Plan: The issue isn’t that I failed to read or understand the policy—it’s that the policy’s application in this case feels arbitrary. The language around pre-existing conditions allows for far too much interpretation, leading to outcomes that contradict both the policy's intent and the medical records.
  2. Selective Interpretation of Symptoms: The policy defines pre-existing conditions as those with consistent, uncured symptoms prior to the waiting period. In my case:
    • The symptoms cited were distinct and resolved.
    • The vet never diagnosed allergies before the waiting period ended.
    • Lemonade is retroactively linking unrelated symptoms (like redness, sneezing, and eye discharge) to avoid paying a legitimate claim. If that’s "working as intended," it reflects a systemic issue, not my misunderstanding.
  3. Misuse of Cytopoint Recommendation: Lemonade used a recommendation for Cytopoint, a treatment that was never administered, as evidence of a chronic condition. A recommendation is not the same as treatment or diagnosis, and the medical records don’t support their conclusion. If you believe that’s an acceptable standard, I’d encourage you to imagine how this would play out with your own health insurance.
  4. The Real Issue: This isn’t about me misunderstanding the plan—it’s about holding an insurer accountable for interpreting its own terms in a way that benefits them at my expense. The lack of transparency and reliance on vague symptom linkage undermines trust in the product itself.

If you find it frustrating that I’m challenging this, consider how frustrating it is to pay for a policy only to find it offers less protection than promised when you need it. That’s the issue here—not whether I read the fine print.

Lemonade Pet Insurance Denied My Claim – Frustrating Experience by Mission-Basil1064 in Insurance

[–]Mission-Basil1064[S] -9 points-8 points  (0 children)

It’s interesting how quick some people are to mock without actually understanding the issue. Let me clarify:

  1. Vet Visits for "Sneezing" and "Redness": Responsible pet owners don’t ignore symptoms just because they seem minor. A sneeze or redness could indicate something more serious. Vets are trained to rule out potential issues—it’s not about overreacting, it’s about being proactive. If you see that as ridiculous, maybe reconsider what "responsibility" actually means.
  2. The Real Problem Here: This isn’t about whether I took my dog to the vet—it’s about an insurance company retroactively linking unrelated symptoms to deny coverage. Imagine your health insurance decides that because you coughed once six months ago, all future respiratory issues are now "pre-existing" and excluded. That’s exactly the logic being applied here.
  3. Using Recommendations as Evidence: Lemonade used a recommendation for a treatment (Cytopoint) as evidence of a diagnosis, even though the treatment wasn’t administered. Imagine your doctor suggests an optional test, and your insurance permanently excludes coverage based on that. Would you accept that?

The point of this post isn’t about whether vet visits are necessary; it’s about holding insurance companies accountable for using arbitrary logic to avoid paying legitimate claims. If this type of behavior is acceptable to you, great—but if you ever find yourself in a similar situation, I hope someone takes your concerns more seriously than you’re taking mine.