The effective date normally means the initial or policy effective date in a reinstatement date of policy document. It can not mean reinstatement date solely. Technically it is not starting effective.
The date of commencement should be the effective date of the policy only.
The date as shown in the Certificate of Insurance, when coverage under this policy commences.
The date as shown in the Certificate of Insurance, when coverage under this policy commences.
On the policy issued date, which is stated in the policy.
The date as shown in the Certificate of Insurance, when coverage under this policy commences.
Yes. You can cancel at any time
This may refer to the "Prior and Pending" litigation date in a Directors and Officers liability policy for a corporation. A new policy will not cover litigation that is either existing (prior to the effective date) or in the process of being filed (pending).
Register date is usually a Fraternal Co. term and is more like an effective date. The register date can be the application date or the issue date. It is not really relevant.
Yes, your coverage begins on the effective date of your policy.
Yes, Allstate allows this via email. I was told to include the policy number as well as the effective date for the cancellation.
Effective date (in any sense) means the earliest date something starts at. For example "Beginning January 1, 2010 xxxxx will be the new law", where "January 1, 2010" is the effective date that the new law becomes official.