One way of extending one's health cover to cover a pre-existing condition would be to migrate to a country which offers its citizens free healthcare as a basic human right, such as Canada, Australia, most European countries and even some African, Asian and South American countries. Another way would be to pay one's current insurance provider an exceedingly large sum of money.
Immediately! Most insurance companies will extend liability from your existing policy, but most won't cover any damage to that new car of yours. Get insurance before you drive off the lot, most times it just takes a phone call to your insurance agent.
For some life insurance, age at inception determines the premium or acceptance. For other forms of insurance, the basis for insurance or premiums may have changed and might not extend to older existing policies. Some auto insurance policies have discounts based on continuous service period.
Extend is already a verb. For example "to extend something" is an action and therefore a verb.
When we go for insurance , the insurance have a time period for which it will be valid. When we want to extend the time period of the insurance,we have to do reinsurance.
There are many different ways to extend an existing deck. One of the plans to extend decks is in the following website (http://www.timbertech.com/design-tools/deck-plans/default.aspx)
I think most insurance companies would consider this a pre-ex. It is still a required procedure for treatment of a medical condition. What they extend the pre-ex clause to in terms of what they will or will not pay for is likely unique to the individual carrier and their guidelines.
An expandable battery is if you would like to switch out the existing battery with a longer-lasting one. It will extend battery life.
First, if you have comprehensive and collision coverage on your own vehicle then check with your own insurance carrier to see if that will automatically extend to the vehicle you will be renting (as that would save you a lot of money). If it does not extend (and you have liability insurance) then you will need to get the rental company's property damage insurance (sometimes called collision damage waiver).
If it deals with the validity of the insurance agreement, yes. If it is related to a claim made by someone else, no.
you can buy it from the rental company or it can extend from you personal auto insurance policy at no extra cost if your insurance company provides this coverage.
Yes, but it varies by the state and insurance companies can extend the amount of time to pay claim, such as if they need to investigate fraud.
you can buy range extender antennas that clamp on to the existing base station antenna