Good automobile insurance policies should include many elements: personal property liability, uninsured motorist coverage, collision coverage, bodily injury liability, comprehensive coverage and personal injury protection (PIP). a proportion of the sections are required by all states while others are an option. Collision coverage pays for any damage to a car or other vehicle when it has a collision with another car or other vehicle or non-vehicular object, even if the policyholder is at fault. Comprehensive insurance policies protect the policyholder in the situation that is or her car or other vehicle is borrowed without permission or stolen, vandalized, harmed by an act of nature or otherwise damaged. Both of these plans are always optional and are usually very costly.
Bodily injury and personal property insurance are required by all the states in the USA in in one way or another. The states differ greatly, however, in the required minimum guaranteed payout. In the state of Alaska, for example, a driver is required to carry coverage that has a guaranteed minimum bodily injury payout of $100,000. But in Florida, a driver is only required to carry coverage worth $10,000.
Many elements of auto insurance cover that could be optional are PIP and uninsured motorist cover. The uninsured motorist coverage protects the policyholder in case he or she has an accident with someone who is uninsured. It provides the insurance policies that would have been supplied by the other protagonist. In the event of an accident, PIP pays for the medical expenses and other extraneous damages incurred by the policyholder and is or her passengers (or if the policyholder is an injured pedestrian). Carrying personal injury protection is mandatory in: Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Hawaii, Kansas, Kentucky, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, North Dakota, Oregon and Utah.
Even if personal injury protection is optional in your state, you may still want to consider purchasing the insurance policies. In the event of an accident, PIP will pay about 80% (depending on insurance policies limits) of the costs of the policyholder and passengers. These costs include medical bills, lost wages and other extraneous expenses. personal injury protection is a no-fault policy, therefore you and your passengers will be covered, even if the reason for claim was your fault.
personal injury protection, sometimes referred to as Medical Payment Insurance or Medpay, is a no-fault insurance policies for a couple of reasons. Firstly, the fact that fault does not have to be determined saves time and consequently allows medical payments to get into the pockets of the injured parties as quickly as possible.
Secondly, it saves all interested parties from the cost of lawsuits being filed to prove responsibility for an accident and therefore who has responsibility for the bills. One time a personal injury protection policy might allow for a lawsuit is in case of very serious injury or death.
Before you purchase personal injury protection, you would be wise to check your current policies and determine whether or not the insurance policies offered by personal injury protection is duplicated elsewhere. For example, the cost of lost wages and medical bills may be recovered through existing health insurance cover. If this is the case, then you may need minimal personal injury protection or none at all. Your driving skills or lack of them, will also help determine whether or not you need personal injury protection. Do you carry passengers regularly? While your health insurance might cover your own medical expenses, it won?t cover those of your passengers (unless they are members of your family who are on your health plan). Ask your regular passengers about their own health insurance policies and its coverage. If they are uninsured or underinsured, you need personal injury protection in order to keep them covered. This may seem unfair, especially if you're the one driving an office car pool, but the safety of any passenger riding in your car is ultimately your responsibility.
If you have your place of residence in a state that requires personal injury protection you will need to know the minimum amount that you must carry because this has already been decided for you. If you live in a state where personal injury protection is optional however, you might decide that you need the extra insurance policies anyway. How much insurance policies you need depends, by enlarge, on your age. If you are middle-aged or older, have good health and liability insurance policies, then you will need minimal personal injury protection insurance policies. If, on the other hand, you are young, just starting out and still don?t have much in the way of health and liability insurance, you will want to protect yourself and your future by carrying as much insurance as you can afford. This is especially true if you have young children or if you regularly carry others in your car or other vehicle.
To conclude, whether you require personal injury protection cover and at what level, depends on many factors: where you work and what you do, your health, your personal circumstances, where you live, your driving habits, and your level of existing cover. Whatever your situation however, you need to research it with great care so that you can be safe in the knowledge that you are securely and adequately covered.
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