Difference-in-conditions (DIC) coverage is a broad, flexible policy that fills gaps left by a primary property program — often including catastrophe perils and, in some structures, deductible exposure. A wind deductible buy-down is narrower and more targeted: it exists specifically to reduce the wind or named-storm deductible.
The tradeoffs
DIC can be powerful when an owner needs to address several gaps at once — for example, flood or earthquake alongside wind — under a single flexible policy. That breadth comes with more complex underwriting and pricing, and the deductible relief is one component of a larger placement. A buy-down, by contrast, does one thing clearly: it lowers the wind deductible, which makes it simpler to understand, quote, and match to a specific exposure. Many owners use them for different jobs, and in some cases together. The right structure depends on how many gaps you are solving for.
