Hello,
The clean claim means that you have a clean history ( no claims ) with your insurance company as you are entitled to earn a discounted premium based on your clean claim history ..
The insure maight use some conditions contain in your policy such as NO CLAIM BONUS , which might be a percentage ( i.e 10% no claim bonus ) or a fixed amount ( USD 100.- no claim bonus ) the calculation for no claim bonus is different from class to class .
Hope all is in order
Regards,
Tamer Haddadin
Printing the claim to paper
each and every claim = all claims
Claim data can generally ber obtained from the Department of Insurance of the state in which you are interested. You will have to specify the nature of the claim(s) for which you wish the date (such as the kind of loss involved). Alternatively, or in addition to the foregoing, you can contact the National Association of Insurance Commissioners. In either event, there will be a cost associated with getting the data.
This means that a claim has been made AGAINST you. Your insurance company, in most instances, will not pay the third party until they have discussed the claim with you and verified what happened.
What do you mean by dual insurance? You cannot have two auto insurance policys on one car. If you mean can you claim damages (let's say) from the 'at fault' party and then also claim them under your collison coverage, no you cannot.
Whenever a claim arises be it in life or general insurance sector, it has to be substantiated by eye witness or material evidence to the satisfaction of the insurance company.
A medical claim is the application for compensation against a health insurance policy or against another's liability insurance policy for the covered portion of a covered event.
It means you had an insurance claim of some sort for which the insurance company did not pay anything.
The primary /secondary payer is usually the insurance plan covering the claim
By "only when you need it" do you mean only when you are aware of a claim or potential claim? If so, the answer is "NO". You cannot buy insurance on a burning house, so to speak.
Excess applies
An occurrence is a loss, or a claim filed on the policy.