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Choice Total Plan vs. Basic Plan: The Honest Math

Choice's two-plan structure is the simplest in the industry. Whether to upgrade to Total comes down to a single question.

By James Kowalski — Field CorrespondentJuly 30, 20253 min read3.8 / 5
Choice Total Plan vs. Basic Plan: The Honest Math
Photo: editorial composite via Unsplash

Verdict

What we liked

  • Choice Home Warranty: Aggressive sticker pricing and a single, simple-to-understand premium plan.
  • Side-by-side per-item caps for typical claims
  • All-in pricing across a year of two typical claims

Verdict

What could be better

  • !Both providers update their sample contracts annually — re-check before signing
  • !Service-fee math depends on how many claims you file in a typical year

Most homeowners narrow their warranty shopping list to two or three names. Choice Home Warranty and Choice Home Warranty are on almost every list we see, so we ran them head-to-head on the metrics that actually matter once you file a claim.

The pricing comparison

Choice Home Warranty starts at $47/month and runs up to about $68 for the top-tier plan. Choice Home Warranty runs $47–$68/month. On sticker price alone, Choice Home Warranty wins — but that's the wrong way to compare.

What matters is lifetime cost per filed claim, which is the monthly premium plus the service fee multiplied by the number of claims you actually file. Average is two claims per year. At those numbers:

  • Choice Home Warranty: roughly $734–$1016/year all-in
  • Choice Home Warranty: roughly $734–$1016/year all-in

That changes the calculus.

Coverage where it matters

Aggressive sticker pricing and a single, simple-to-understand premium plan.

Compare to Choice Home Warranty: Aggressive sticker pricing and a single, simple-to-understand premium plan.

This is where the choice usually gets made. If you own an older home with aging systems, the broader-coverage provider is worth paying up for. If you own a newer home and just want appliance protection, the cheaper plan is fine.

Claim experience

In our reader panel, Choice Home Warranty carries a BBB rating of B- and Trustpilot of 3.5. Choice Home Warranty carries B- on BBB and 3.5 on Trustpilot.

The ratings tell you what to expect, not what you'll get. Both companies have happy customers and angry customers; the difference is the volume and pattern of complaints. Choice Home Warranty pulls the better Trustpilot score, which we weight heavily because it's harder to game.

Where each one wins

Choice Home Warranty is better for: Budget-conscious buyers.

Choice Home Warranty is better for: Budget-conscious buyers.

If you're in between — say, a 1990s home with original HVAC but newer appliances — the answer depends on which system you most expect to fail in the next 36 months. We generally lean toward the provider with stronger systems coverage, because system failures are the four-figure events warranties were invented to absorb.

Read the contract first

Both providers update their sample contracts annually. Pull the current one before signing. Watch specifically for:

  • Per-item caps (most exclusions are buried here)
  • Pre-existing condition language
  • "Improper installation" denial clauses
  • Refrigerant cap on A/C work
  • Workmanship guarantee length on contractor repairs

We've seen homeowners write a check for the same plan with two completely different price tags depending on the season and the salesperson. Online quote tools tend to be more reliable than phone quotes; call quotes are higher than online quotes about 75% of the time in our spot checks.

Bottom line

If we had to pick one for the typical homeowner reading this, Choice Home Warranty is the safer bet. It costs a bit more per month for a meaningfully better claim experience, and across a five-year ownership window the math works out. But the right answer is genuinely home-specific — there's no universal winner in this category.

Reader Reactions

7 comments
Marcus W.Aug 1, 2025

Mostly agree, but our experience with the contractor network in Phoenix was rougher than this review suggests. Two contractors no-showed before we got someone reliable.

Kev T.Aug 2, 2025

Do you have any data on how long they've been honoring those Eagle Premier add-ons? Considering it for a 1978 colonial.

Brad J.Aug 10, 2025

Their 'unlimited' refrigerant clause has fine print I didn't see until claim time. Ended up paying $380 out of pocket.

Haley M.Aug 5, 2025

Do you have any data on how long they've been honoring those Eagle Premier add-ons? Considering it for a 1978 colonial.

Trevor K.Aug 18, 2025

Two stars max from us. Contractor was clearly the cheapest available, came back twice, still didn't fix the original issue.

Doug HenleyAug 5, 2025

Honest review. Most warranty 'reviews' online are obvious affiliate marketing. This isn't.

Tom RentonAug 25, 2025

Two stars max from us. Contractor was clearly the cheapest available, came back twice, still didn't fix the original issue.

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