Yes you can but one home has to be your primary home which is where you live most of the time and you can purchase a homeowners policy for your second home as a secondary dwelling. If you rent the home this is not the kind of policy you need though so you must keep this in mind. If you ever change the use of the home you need to contact you agent immediately so you can get the proper kind of coverage.
Sure. Tell the insurance companies the circumstances. One will be your primary residence and the other is a secondary residence or a rental property or whatever the circumstances.
ABSOLUTELY NOT!!!!
yes, they will treat it as if the primary was a different company. You pay two premiums. If they do not, contact the DOI.
The personal umbrella policy was developed in the 1960s to provide additional liability coverage beyond the limits of an individual's primary insurance policies, such as auto or homeowners insurance.
"If the question is referring to Nationwide as one word, the generally well known entity is the Insurance company and their primary product is auto insurance. The company also offers other types of insurance coverage from renters insurance to business coverage, homeowners, condo and life insurance."
The Home Insurance Edmonton website is the primary provider locator geared specifically for customers in the Edmonton area. Home Insurance Edmonton offers quote comparison as well as information on types of home insurance and tips on finding the best rates.
The Hartford Insurance Company deals with may different types of insurance, however their primary focus is that of life insurance for elderly people.
Check this page for the answer http://www.steveshorr.com/law_relating_to_insurance.htm primary policy will be medicare&secondary will bethe patient's commercial insurance company.as medicare covers all.the remaining which is not allowable wiill be covered by secondary
There is one major difference between these types of claims. When a person has two different insurance carriers, one of them is designated as the primary coverage and the other as the secondary. The primary insurance should be billed first and normally pays the bulk of the bill. The secondary insurance gets billed for the remainder of the bill which the primary insurance did not pay for.
The policy owner, usually the Primary named insured, can add or remove people and coverages from the policy they purchased as their coverage requirements change.
I think the wife's insurance is primary.
If you have insurance through your employer, and you are the policy holder,(the insurance is in your name) this insurance will be primary for you, and your spouses insurance policy will be secondary. The insurance policy thru your spouse's employer, (your spouse is the policy holder, or the insurance is in their name), this would be primary for your spouse, and your policy would be their secondary. Here's the phamplet from Medicare http://www.medicare.gov/Publications/Pubs/pdf/02179.pdf