Your answer is very vague but I think i know where you are going. The answer is mostly yes, insurance coverage is usually capped off to a top amount or in the case of auto insurance to the value of the vehicle for you vehicle and to others there value as determined by which every book or publication (like nada, or kelly blue book or mostly Galves which is mostly whole sale value). Then there is usually a cap on other insurances. say your property in an accident is $100K then the cap is $100K. Hope this helped... gig1
As little as they can get you to accept.
The amount a person gets paid for an accident from the insurance company will depend on the injuries sustained.
A deductible, or insurance deductible, is an amount of money the first of which the insurance company will not pay towards the cost of the loss suffered. For example, a $500 deductible means that the insurance company will not pay the first $500 of a loss. Deductibles are made for the purposes of keeping the costs of insurance down by making the insured pay a certain amount of money and not make a claim towards minor losses. If the accident is the other person's fault, either their insurance company will pay that deductible or you can sue them in court.
Usually if an accident is determined not to be the insured's fault, then their insurance rates will not rise as the insurance company did not lose any money from covering the driver involved in the accident. If the accident is determined as being inconclusive, the rates may rise some, to adjust for the amount of money the insurance company lost in the accident.
No, Unless the body work is being done because of an accident that you were found at fault in. Then rates are determined if damages are over or under a certain dollar amount, this amount varies by insurance company but the threshold is usually $750.00
The insurance company will only pay the 'book' value of the vehicle as if it were in perfect condition unless damage prior to the accident was discovered and that damage will be deducted from the 'book value'.
Dog insurance is pretty much exactly what it sounds like. If you have pet insurance, you can be covered for if your pet is ill or is hurt by an accident. A certain amount of cover is given if you have the insurance plan.
If the other company only gave you the deductible amount, then probably not. But if both paid you the full amount, then you should turn the other company's check to yours. If the larger check came from the other driver's insurance, I'd return the check from your own insurance company - you're entitled to the deductible amount, if you're not at fault.
A premium is the amount of money you pay the auto/health insurance company monthly, quarterly, or biannually whether or not you get in an accident or go to the hospital. The higher your premium the lower your deductible, and the lower your premium the higher your deductible. A deductible is the amount of money after you get in a car accident or visit the hospital before your insurance company pays anything. After you have met your deductible the insurance company covers the rest of the expenses.
The cover amount in insurance is the amount of money that covers the said person up to a certain amount of money just in case of a of any accidents or deaths. If any of these cases arise the insurance company pays you an agreed upon cover amount.
The cover amount in insurance is the amount of money that covers the said person up to a certain amount of money just in case of a of any accidents or deaths. If any of these cases arise the insurance company pays you an agreed upon cover amount.
There are a couple considerations:Yes you can if:The shop you chose is not baned by the paying insurance companyThe insurance company approves the repairing shopThey repairing shop will do the work for the money provided by the insurance companyORYou are willing to pay the remaining amount the insurance company wont cover. I have done this to get a shop I trusted but wanted "To Much Money" for the repair.