Want this question answered?
ZERO! Call the claims department and file the claim. 4lifeguild
If you ask your insurance company to cancel your policy, they will.
It is very rare that an insurer would cancel your policy after a single claim unless the insurer determines that the claim was the result of some severe negligence or a persistent moral hazard such as lack of maintenance. Multiple claims however are another matter. Excessive claims activity usually will result in the companies reassessment of the risk factors associated with a homeowners insurance policy.
An oligarchy.
If thee policy has already lapsed, there is no active policy to cancel. It means that it is already cancelled.
There are only a few reasons that your insurer could cancel a policy mid-term (as opposed to non-renewal).Material misrepresentation-You provided information on your application that was not accurate.Change in risk-Your risk profile has changed substantially since your policy was agreed to. Perhaps you've filed numerous claims, made a substantial change to your property, or allowed something to fall into a state of disrepair.Non-payment-Insurers will quickly cancel a policy that is in arrears.
If you cannot cancel a policy that you don't want that you are paying for on a spouse you need to contact the company which provides the policy. Most companies should allow you to cancel a policy.
Simple. There really is no such thing as a no-cancellation policy. Read the fine print and you will see that there are many reasons that the company can and will cancel the policy. Such as not paying the premium, too many claims, suspended license, etc. This was a marketing gimmick devised by AARP to scare older drivers into thinking their insurance company would cancel them because of their age then coming up with a solution in a "no-cancel" policy. AARP is terrible about trying to keep retired persons scared of everything they can come up with then misrepresenting themselves as a solution while in reality just making money off of them. Scams.
Only the policy-holder has the right to cancel. You have no say in the matter.
i don't think so
If you have an accident in the first 60 days of your policy,, Yes They can cancel your policy
Yes. You can cancel at any time