What insurance company uses policy numbers starting iwth MIL
SCJ Insurance
Policy numbers are not proprietary to any insurance company so you can't really tell which company a certain prefix is from. For example several companies use PA as a prefix because it represents "Personal Auto" or some use the state the polis in as the starting prefix. CCAP sound like a commercial policy, but you can't be sure of anything with policy numbers.
Policy numbers are not standardized in any way. This means that it is up to each insurance company what they choose to use for policy numbers. Many companies use PA at the beginning of auto policies for Personal Auto and HO on homeowners policies. Some use numbers only. You cannot tell what company issued a policy by the prefix or suffix of a policy number.
GAINSCO insurance
ACC Insurance Co.
The insurance company that has a policy which starts with "ABU" is Explorer Insurance (877)849-4678. Hope that helps!
Usually not. While some insurance companies use certain policy numbers to tell someone within the company what type of policy it is, you usually cannot tell what company it is based only on the policy number. For instance, a large number of insurance companies use "PA" as the starting of a policy number sequence for auto insurance. The reason for PA is that it tells company people this is a "Personal Auto" policy. But with many companies using the same prefix it would not tell you which company it is because the rest of the policy number is just a combination of numbers and letters to show different individual policies.
Discovery Insurance starts with PAN1234567.
Policy numbers
I was looking for a CT company with the Policy # PACT. It turns out the insurance company is Esurance - not to be confused with ensurance. The last two letters are the abbreviation for the state.
It could be from any of a number of insurance companies. There is no regulation or laws pertaining to the way that policy numbers are determined.