If Florida is like most other states, a condominium unit owner pays property taxes for the unit.
AllState provides Homeowners Insurance, Condominium Insurance, Renters Insurance, and Landlord Property Insurance.
It pays to another party if you injure them or damage their property.
If the Illinois Condominium Property Act says that you **shall** have insurance -- not **may** -- and lays out specific terms and conditions, you are strongly urged to obey the law. In the case of a disaster, without insurance you may be doubly charged: once by the cost of recovering from the uninsured disaster and the second time by the law which may penalize you for not carrying insurance. Your property manager or member of your board will be able to answer your question specifically.
Normally the taxes and insurance are included in the payment.
Your own liability insurance will never pay for the damage to your property or for your medical expenses. Your collision insurance pays for damage to your property, if it is your fault. Your Uninsured Motorist Insurance or Underinsured Motorist Insurance pays for damage to your property if caused by someone else who is uninsured or under-insured. Your liability insurance will pay for the damage to someone else's property or for someone else's medical expenses, if it is your fault. Someone else's liability insurance will pay for the damage to your property or for your medical expenses, if it is their fault.
If you do not have comprehensive insurance, unfortunately you do. Bummer!
In a condominium, an owner pays a monthly assessment to the association that owns the exterior real estate assets. The association then pays for, for example: * Building insurance * Building and property security * Common area housekeeping * Sewer and water service and other utilities * Landscaping services * Preventative maintenance * Legal fees * Accountancy fees Depending on the condominium, as an owner, you can enjoy all the luxuries of owning a home and the board members are responsible for protection, maintenance and preservation of the real estate assets that all unit owners own in common.
The At-Fault motorist (via their insurance) is liable for damage to property.
Loss assessment on a homeowner's insurance policy is protection against getting sued for a person being injured on the property. This is a common insurance that condominium owners need to protect themselves from lawsuits for someone being injured in the common areas of the condominium complex..
They are not the same. Homeowner's insurance insures the property: dwelling, personal property, other structures on the property, etc. Private mortgage insurance pays the mortgage in case of the death or disability of the mortgagor.
The state pays the property tax.