The pre-fix or any other part of a policy number will not tell you what insurance company writes the auto policy. To my knowledge their is no regulations, requirements, or laws about what should make up a policy number. For this reason companies use whatever they wish to make up the numbers. Generally it is whatever fits in their system and what they have always used. For instance, many companies use PA for personal auto policies, HO or HM for homeowners policies, etc.
SCJ Insurance
The insurance company that has a policy which starts with "ABU" is Explorer Insurance (877)849-4678. Hope that helps!
What insurance company uses policy numbers starting iwth MIL
Discovery Insurance starts with PAN1234567.
APV is the prefix on Farm Bureau policies.
Contact your insurance company or your agent. They can find your insurance policy number by your social.
You can call the insurance company and provide your policy number, and they can provide any details on your policy, or send a duplicate policy if the original was lost.
Usually not. While some insurance companies use certain policy numbers to tell someone within the company what type of policy it is, you usually cannot tell what company it is based only on the policy number. For instance, a large number of insurance companies use "PA" as the starting of a policy number sequence for auto insurance. The reason for PA is that it tells company people this is a "Personal Auto" policy. But with many companies using the same prefix it would not tell you which company it is because the rest of the policy number is just a combination of numbers and letters to show different individual policies.
A policy number is a number or combination of letter and number that designates that policy from all others within an insurance company.
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A policy number will be specific to one insurance company. However, it will not be recognizable to just anyone looking at it.
That is a State Farm policy number.