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Yes. You would have to pay what your comprehensive deductible is.
The identified third party at fault is responsible for paying the deductible in the event of a motor vehicle accident.
It can. Depends on the item & your deductible.
It belongs to the insurance company
Collision pays to have your car fixed if it is damaged in a collision with another vehicle. There is usually a deductible that you have to pay.
THE POLICY HOLDER, WHO IS USUALLY THE OWNER OF THE TRUCK IS RESPONSIBLE FOR THE DEDUCTIBLE. If the truck driver is fully responsble for the accident, his insurance should pay for the damages to the car and there would be no deductible. If the car owner went through his coverage first to get repairs done, then the car owner is responsible for the deductible. Then the car owners insurance would go through subrugation to the truck drivers insurance to get full payment of the loss. When that is completed, the car owner would get his deductible returned to him.
The vandal if the can be found and sued. Otherwise your insurance if you have full coverage. You will pay a deductible and recover the deductible if the vandal is ever found and successfully sued by your insurance carrier.
You would have to pay your deductible and your insurance company would pay the rest unless you knew which car the tire came off of.
It is the liability portion of your auto policy that pays for the damage to another vehicle that you hit. There is no deductible to fix the other car.
Yes ... Some insureds have full glass coverage, others may have a deductible to satisfy before the insurance pays.
Unfortunately - yes, rental cars do get stolen. Most rental comapnies have theft insurance, but usually have some sort of deductible. Rental cars get stolen from customers all the time. If you were to accept the Lost Damage Waiver from most companies, the car would be covered, there is NO deductible. Now if you were to leave the keys in the car, or give them to someone and they took off with the car; you are out of luck. This is correct. LDW/CDW (depends on the state) would cover the car as long as the contract was not violated and as long as it wasn't stolen due to your neglect to protecting the car.
You do not pay a deductible for the car that you hit. Your liability coverage does not have a deductible.