Not necessarily. It depends on the "Plan Year". For example, if your plan has a calendar year of January 1 through December 31, and by September 15 you have met your deductible, the new insurance carrier would have to issue a Deductible Credit Transfer because you have already met the deductible for the plan year. However, if the new plan has a plan year that runs from September 1, through August 31, then by September 15, your plan has already started to run and the deductible after September 1 only is the amount you can apply. YES
Health insurance plans have three main components: the premium, the deductible and the co-insurance. The premium is the money that you pay each month to be covered by the health plan. This is the only part of the plan that is paid whether you use your insurance or not. The deductible is the amount of money you have to pay out of pocket each year, before your insurance company will begin picking up part of the bill. The co-insurance is the portion of the bill that you are required to cover after the deductible has been reached. These companies together make up your actual cost of health insurance.
An insurance deductible is a set amount of money that the insured is required to pay before the insurance company starts to pay. For instance, if your deductible for the year is $100.00, and your first insurance bill is $150.00 , they will only pay $50 and you will have to pay $100 (deductible). Every insurance bill after that will be paid for by the insurance company until the end of the year and then the cycle starts again. The deductible is your responsibility.
"After deductible" means you will not get coverage or certain benefits until a deductible has been met. Insurance policies often have more than one deductible. For example, you may have a $1,000 per year deductible for certain medical expenses, and another deductible for prescription drugs. If your prescription drug deductible is $500 per year, you will have to pay out of pocket the first $500 of drug cots before your plan will kick. Many plans have complicated formulas for how deductibles are applied and how they are met so there is no one answer. But "after deductible" always means that the person with the insurance policy will have to pay something first, before getting reduced-cost, free, or co-pay services and drugs. Source: Women in Business (http://www.womeninbusiness.about.com)
Most insurance companies allow credit for the deductible met for services that actually incurred during the same calendar year. Call your new insurance company and find out if they allow the credit and what proof they require.
It really is not possible to define that in percentages. But think of it this way, the higher the deductible ( the amount you pay BEFORE the insurance company begins to pay ) the lower the premium. Just do the math, if you are taking a $2,000 deductible over a $1,000 deductible , but you are only saving $200 a year, it is not a good choice. You are basically putting yourself on the hook for potentially another $1,000 in deductible to save $200.
Whether for health or automobile insurance, these plans require you to pay a greater part of the cost of insured services. The benefit is that your premium is lower--with auto insurance, frequently increasing your deductible can reduce your premium by more than the deductible (i.e., if you raise your comprehensive from $250 to $100, you would save $160 a year). There is also a secondary benefit in that you will make fewer claims which will reduce the likelihood of your policy being cancelled or having your premiums go up in the future.
Probably not. The date on which services were rendered will usually be the determining factor. If you had already fulfilled your deductible for 2009, your insurance company may need to reconcile their books and may owe you a refund of some portion of your deductible. However, if you had not otherwise met your deductible for 2009, it may still be possible for what you paid at the end of 2009 to be counted toward your 2010 deductible. Contact your health insurance company. In special circumstances like these, some health insurance companies will allow funds paid toward a deductible in the last quarter of one year to be applied towards the next year's deductible.
Deductible
The annual deductible is the aggregate maximum amount that the insurance policy requires the insured(s) to pay over the course of a year in deductibles. Stated otherwise, a deductible will normally be incurred for each physician's visit, medical test, or other procedure. There may come a point however, during the course of the year, when the total of all of those deductibles meet or exceed the annual deductible (specified in the policy). At that point the annual deductible will have been met and until the start of the new policy year, no further individual deductibles will have to be paid.
No they are not or the death benefit would be taxable. Since you said mortgage insurance I am assuming that you mean PMI or Private mortage insurance and not mortgage life insurance. Yes, mortgage insurance is tax deductible as of 2007. You can see the amount of PMI paid for the year on the final escrow statement that your mortgage lender sends you in December or January.
You pay a deductible only when you file a claim to collect on your insurance policy. Like if your home catches fire and you file a claim to collect the money to repair or replace the home, you pay the $500 deductible or whatever your deductible is. If you have more than one claim in a year, you probably will pay deductibles for each occurrence and also depending on the insurance company, you will probably be dropped from coverage--most companies will not tolerate multiple claims.