Some will. Check with the secondary insurer.
Yes, if the secondary insurance plan covers it In the pharmacy (drugs) world of primary and secondary coverage, this is true.
NO
PMI is not a deductible expense.
Coverage under private insurance varies greatly based on your carrier and your deductible. Most private medical insurance is a cushion against major catastrophes like a sudden heart attack.
ChampVA is always secondary to private health insurance, EXCEPT to Medicaid. In that case it is always primary. "Congress clearly has intended that CHAMPUS be the secondary payer to all health benefit and insurance plans... except in the case of a plan (Medicaid) administered under title 19 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1396, et seq.)"
You do not determine which of your insurance policies are primary in cases where you have multiple health insurance policies. The Federal government passed a law several years ago making Medicare secondary to any other health insurance that you have through an employer or retirement program. This transferred billions of dollars per year from the Medicare and Medicaid programs to private insurance companies all at one time.
Medical providers are not required to take patients, regardless of the type of coverage.
In Australia, Private school fees are not tax deductible.
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.
are not health insurance plans in the strict sense, but offer a partial alternative to expensive individual private insurance plans.are similar to Individual Retirement Accounts.must be combined with a qualified high-deductible private health plan
If you are talking about PMI (Private Mortgage Insurance for those who put less than 20% down on their purchase), that should be deductible if the mortgage originated in 2007 or later. If you are talking about homeowner's insurance (fire, burglary, liability), that is never deductible for your personal residence no matter who placed it. If it is a business or investment property, it would be deductible like any other business/investment expense.
its private business it is all three of the sectors in side company