== == You're the one that got the medical services, so yes.
Depends on insurance.
Flood insurance typically provides compensation for damage to your property and its contents, but it does not directly pay off a mortgage. If you receive a payout from your flood insurance, you can use those funds to repair or rebuild your home, which may help you maintain your mortgage payments. However, you are still responsible for the mortgage balance itself, and the insurance funds do not automatically settle that debt.
If the provider is out of network or not contracted with the secondary insurance, they do no have to bill the secondary and the patient is responsible for the balance (if any) owing
Vestibular apparatus from the middle ear is mainly responsible for balance.
Prepaid insurance is reported on the balance sheet as a
Yes, you are still responsible for the loan no matter what happens to the car, hopefully the insurance payout covers what you still owe on it.
who is responsible for confirming your bank account balance
ask your mom.
Payment of insurance expense affects the balance sheet as it reduces the cash or bank balance which is part of balance sheet as well.
You are responsible for the difference in what the car is worth,(Insurance Payment) and the balance of the loan. Insist the insurance pay you the NADA retail value of the car, not the Blue Book value.
Since your insurance might not cover the balance you still have on your financed car, GAP insurance protects the balance of your loan in the event of an accident.
As a billing clerk in a medical office, I would ask at the time of service who is the responsible party for any uncovered charges. Most of the time the parents assumed responsibility for the charges-- but this is not written in stone. The "guarantor" information can be edited at any time and if the parents want the 18 year old to pay then he/she would become responsible for his/her balance.