"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)
The benefit to a ROTH IRA tax deductible is that it is TAX DEDUCTIBLE. But that does not mean that there are no implications, so you still have to be thorough.
yes a higher deductible means a lower premium.
You mean like a Hollywood talent agent? That would be deductible if you were in show business. If you mean like an insurance agent, that would not be deductible unless it was necessary to help you buy insurance for your business.
40 coinsurance after deductible means that after you have paid your deductible amount, you will be responsible for paying 40 of the remaining covered expenses, while your insurance will cover the remaining 60.
deductible mean patient should pay pearticular amount to the provider, before provider start treting the patient.
deductible
A 40 coinsurance after deductible means that after you have paid your deductible amount, you will be responsible for paying 40 of the remaining covered expenses, while your insurance will cover the other 60.
When it says 40 coinsurance after deductible, it means that after you have paid your deductible amount, you will be responsible for paying 40 of the remaining costs for covered services, while your insurance will cover the other 60.
Subtract amount from taxes owed. (If you qualify for the deduction)
I assume you mean how does the deductible work. When you file a claim on any insurance, the insurance company will take out the deductible before it issues the payment to you. In many states the banks are protected and the check has to be made out to you and the mortgagee company.
It is "deductible," except in Australia, where it's spelled "deductable."
The deductible is the amount of money you will pay out of pocket before the insurance coverage kicks in. If you have 900.00 in damages, they wont pay anything. If you have 1500.00 in damages, they will give you 500.00. Less meaning - minus the deductible