This covers damage or injury that you may cause to other persons. The key is that it involves your being held financially responsible for injuries to other persons as a result of the way you operated your car. This coverage does not apply to your injuries.
This covers damage that you may cause to the property of others. The key is that it involves your being held financially responsible for property you may damage or destroy as a result of the way you operated your car. This coverage does not apply to damage to your property.
The limits and coverage details also vary widely by state. It typically pays for your expenses that result from an accident caused by an uninsured driver. Now be careful with this coverage. An uninsured driver must be the one who is responsible for causing the loss. "Uninsured" is typically defined to include a person who has no insurance; a person who can't be located ("hit and run drivers");a person who has insurance, but their insurance company is financially incapable to provide coverage; plus other situations which may be considered to involve an "uninsured" motorist. IMPORTANT: The amount of protection under this coverage may depend upon state law. Payment under this coverage part may be controlled by the limits mandated by the state's financial responsibility law. Or, a particular state may have specific uninsured motorist legislation that dictates what limit or limits must be offered to insurance consumers. In some cases, a consumer may choose to reject the coverage. Typically, the rejection must be in writing.
Although the coverage concept is similar to
uninsured motorist, this coverage is for injuries caused by a
driver who is inadequately insured. Basically, it operates as
excess insurance, paying for your expenses which exceed the amount
of insurance protection available from the other driver's policy.
For example. you are seriously injured by a person who carries
a bodily injury liability limit of $25,000. Your injuries amount
to $50,000. Your Underinsured Motorist Coverage limit is $100,000.
If the loss circumstances qualify for coverage per the policy's
underinsured motorist provisions, your policy would pay the difference
between $25,000 and $50,000, or an additional $25,000.
Remember that this is merely an introduction to complex policy coverages. Be sure to contact your agent for detailed insurance information. Please watch for Part Two of this topic which discusses other, typical auto policy coverages.
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