Under-Coverage
If you didn't have enough coverage then the insurance company would just pay out the policy limits and generally the other party would ask you to pay the difference.
Convenience sample
Yes, under federal law, employers with 20 or more employees are generally required to offer COBRA coverage to eligible employees and their dependents when they experience a qualifying event that would result in a loss of health insurance coverage.
When you file an insurance claim, if you do not have enough insurance coverage, under insurance claims can be the result. Under insurance is a term used when calculating claims when the coverage is not enough and the policy has undervalued the amount insured.
It would normally be part of the comprehensive coverage.
Yes, that would be under your comprehensive coverage.
Yes, under the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (COBRA), companies with 20 or more employees are required to offer COBRA coverage to eligible employees who experience a qualifying event that would result in a loss of health insurance coverage.
Yes, under the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (COBRA), employers with 20 or more employees are required to offer COBRA coverage to eligible employees who experience a qualifying event that would result in a loss of health insurance coverage.
The pool would be covered under Coverage B "other structures" of your policy. Any structure not attached to your home is covered under Coverage B.
The primary coverage is provided under the plan provided by the employer. Secondary coverage is usually a result of being covered as a dependent under someone else's health insurance plan.
under-coverage.