Insurance for students

No-one said life ever has to be fair but, as parents, you quickly discover the world is not set up to make things easy for you. There are challenges at every turn. Of course, all the healthcare needs can be put on the back burner if you or your partner have a family plan provided by your employers. Now all you have to do is read the small print to see what coverage is provided for children while they are at elementary school or high school while still under the magic age of 18 years. After they pass the threshold of their eighteenth birthdays, the coverage gets more patchy. They are still family members but the extent of the coverage may change. If you have not been fortunate to find an employer offering health coverage as part of the pay package, the world has been less welcoming. It’s entirely possible that you and your family are one of the growing millions who are uninsured or underinsured. This leaves a number of options to explore for the children.

For some years, the federal government has recognized that children are the future of our country. If they do not grow up strong, the future may not see the US remain so dominant internationally. So, with federal encouragement, states have been offering a safety net for children. The alternatives are Medicaid and the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) which was established by the Balanced Budget Act of 1997 to expand health insurance coverage to uninsured children in families with income too high to qualify for Medicaid. For the record, Congress has provided about $40 billion to fund SCHIP through 2007. Federal funding is currently available. Outside the federal and state programs, some elementary and high schools group together to offer health coverage for their students where the families are uninsured or underinsured. Some states have not set generous criteria for access to their SCHIP and the group policies help the modestly well-off families bridge the health plan gap.

Once children turn adult at 18, they are mostly on their own. If you as parents provide private coverage, this can represent the best outcome as they work their way through college and university. Otherwise, this leaves the young adults to live with the risks of no cover, or accept one of the “affordable” policies offered by their college or university. It’s a sad fact your children will consider themselves invincible. Many are lucky and survive the education part of their life without accident or illness. But if anything serious goes wrong, they will add significant medical expenses to the burden of loans and credit card debts. Local community clinics can only provide basic care. The college or university policies are often highly affordable. More importantly, starting a health insurance policy at low student rates gives them track record when they later seek coverage as an employee. But one word of caution. These are not comprehensive policies and they often limit or exclude serious injuries or disease. As parents, you may feel it wise to top up the basic cover. Get multiple health insurance quotes to find the best value additional cover. Even if your children are enrolled as medical students, they cannot expect anything more than routine treatment from the medical professionals in their area. They will be treated as “ordinary” students when it comes to paying the deductible and any copayments.

Homeowners insurance while moving

So you’ve finally moved into your new house and currently unpacking your stuff to make your new home beautiful and comfortable. But what about insurance, did you get the right amount to cover your new home? When changing place of residence, even moving to another house in the same block, there are much more things influenced by your actions than homeowners insurance. Here’s a list of things you should consider analyzing and adjusting when moving to another place of residence.

Homeowners insurance

In case you’ve financed your new house purchase through a mortgage loan, your loan company will most likely require you to have homeowners insurance. Still, there’s a big difference in coverage amounts that comply with mortgage requirements and those, which meet your personal insurance needs. There may be special items you want to cover with your homeowners insurance, so getting an additional floater to your standard policy would be quite wise. You could also learn what are the additional risks in your new area of residence and get adequate insurance coverage for cases of flood, earthquakes, firestorms if any apply.

Flood insurance

Standard homeowners insurance policies do not carry any coverage in cases of flood and associated damage. Not only those who live near big rivers and oceans need flood insurance coverage. Only if you’re not living in a Designated Flood Area, you most likely need flood insurance. The company providing you homeowners insurance will likely to have flood coverage too, so ask your provider when moving to another house.

Car insurance

You may think that there’s no direct connection between auto and home insurance, but unfortunately that’s not true. In case you’re involved in a serious traffic accident and the damage exceeds your liability coverage limits, some of your most important assets (such as your new home) could be lost due to legal action. That is why it is important to revise both your home insurance and auto insurance policies to make sure you have just the right amount of liability coverage to have your house protected against any claims. In order to do so, it would be wise to consider umbrella coverage, so ask your insurance company about that. If you have both your home and auto insurance with the same company you may get more favorable rates on this one.

Life insurance

No one likes thinking about unpleasant things but what if you pass away while having your mortgage still un-financed? Do you want your family members to carry this burden and sacrifice things like your child’s college education or medical insurance? By getting life insurance you assure that your mortgage loan will be paid off no matter what. Besides, if you investigate the question a bit deeper, you will find certain term life insurance that provide benefits after a certain period of time while you’re still alive. On the other hand, some continuous life insurance policies have investments aspects with them, which would be nice if you have an extended mortgage deal.

Which is better: term or permanent insurance?

Perhaps it’s the wrong way to think about insurance, but it’s really nothing more than a form of licensed gambling. You find this insurance company prepared to take you on and then place a bet on how long you are going to live. The insurance companies studies the form guide and decides how long people like you tend to live. It sets the premium and the jackpot number. If you die within the first few years, your family are big winners. They hit the jackpot for just a few premium instalments. But if you live far longer than expected, the insurance company wins big because it has the use of all your money during your lifetime and only pays back the sum agreed. That’s one of the interesting things about inflation. What looks a big number now may be peanuts in fifty years time. That’s why buying a policy with a fixed benefit is such an interesting bet.

Now to a simple distinction: a term policy buys you a fixed cash sum if you die within the period agreed. If you live past the due date, you lose, i.e. no benefit is payable and there is no refund of your premium instalments. The contract terminates. A permanent policy pays a benefit but there is an accumulating cash value, i.e. there is a form of savings account built into the plan. This appreciates in value during the term of the policy so, if the insurance company makes good investment decisions, the amount payable on death can be significantly more than the amount you paid in. This reflects and offsets the problem of inflation. Agreements to pay a fixed dollar amount usually represent very poor value over the long term. The further benefit of the investment element is that you can recover the cash value of the policy before you die. This is done either by surrendering the policy to the insurance company or by selling the policy on the open market. Sale of the policy realises more than the surrender value. Alternatively, most insurance companies allow you to borrow money from the investment account. This is good over the short term but never forget that interest is payable on the loan. If you are not careful, the continuing deduction of interest over time can wipe out the remaining cash value in the account. It is always worth paying back the loan or cutting your losses and surrendering the policy if repayment is unaffordable.

Because it has additional value, permanent life insurance policies are more expensive to buy than term policies. But, once the contract is in place, the amount of the instalments is fixed so, as inflation devalues the dollar, it becomes an increasingly affordable proportion of your monthly paycheck. If you renew successive term policies, the premium rises with each new policy. Some argue that the key advantage of term policies is you get cheap coverage and can invest the money saved on the premiums. If you make good investment decisions, you can emerge a winner. So, if you are only thinking short-term, i.e. up to ten years, go for term. If you are thinking strategically over your lifetime, go for a permanent policy. When buying the first policy or looking to top up your cover, always get the maximum number of life insurance quotes to ensure you find the best deal.

Life insurance in Arizona

With so many insurance products on the Arizona market today, some people have a really hard time finding exactly what they want without the initial confusion. Besides all typical types of insurance products such as auto, health, life, house coverage, there are many sub-groups to these types of policies that each caters their specific groups of needs and buyers respectively. Of course, you can drive around your town or city to get all the information you need directly from the insurance company, or you can make a dozen calls to hear that the company you’re speaking with is the best insurer around. Well, if spending so much time is okay with you then you are free to do just as you wish. But these days people tend to save their time on everything they can, and shopping for insurance is no exception.

Buying life insurance in Arizona is not different from buying it in any other state of the US. Of course, there are local requirements and legal frameworks that may be specific for each state, but in general the picture is the same across the country. And so are the rules of shopping for insurance. So if you want to find a really good insurance policy in Arizona, the following tips will sure help you get exactly what you need with minimum time and money spent.

Many insurance companies offer free online life insurance quotes through third party sites, making it a lot easier for you to find the right kind of policy without having to pick up the phone. You can use the free quote systems for as much as you like, trying to determine which type of coverage will meet your needs and what company offers that for the best price out there. But be warned, not all companies you’ll get quotes from online may be licensed to provide insurance products in Arizona. A good way to check if the company you are interested in is a legal seller in Arizona is contacting site of Arizona Insurance Department

Why would you want to do that? Well, if the company is not licensed in Arizona you can get very attractive quotes from it, but your policy won’t have any legal force within the state and the Insurance Department won’ be able to protect your interests in case the company doesn’t meet your customer requirements. Of course, cheap life insurance sounds very attractive but don’t get carried away by such searches as you may end up paying more than you’ve initially intended.

Arizona Insurance Department can also be very helpful for determining the right companies to shop around. Of course, the workers at the Department are not given the right to advertise any insurance providers, however they may provide you with a black-list of insurance companies that were filed complaints on from other citizens. It is a good way to avoid bad providers in the first place.

In order to learn which providers are good and reliable in your area, you may want to ask other insurance users about their experience with any given provider. Having first hand information always helps to see how any given company processes claims, receives premiums and provides benefits with the policy. So good luck and try to get the best Arizona life insurance!

Raising of auto insurance premium rates in Wisconsin.

Will Wisconsin become a trend?

The world is always a complicated place. What should be simple turns out to be hard. What should be obvious turns out to be obscure. Logic tells us that when the law says everyone should buy something, this should make for a bigger market. When the market is bigger, the prices should fall. In the case of insurance, this should be even more true. The whole point of insurance is that you gather a group of people together and share the cost of the risk between them. The more people in the group, the smaller the cost of each share. Except it never works out like you expect. When it comes to capitalism and the profit motive, logic loses out to corporations and their need to pay a dividend to their stockholders.

This is a story about Wisconsin today. Tomorrow, it could be about states across the US. The reason? The same problems that the state lawmakers were trying to solve in Wisconsin apply to every other state in the union. Let’s start at the beginning. All but three states have laws requiring vehicle owners to carry liability insurance when they drive on a public road. They all set minimum levels of cover against personal injuries and property damage caused to third parties. The justification is all about responsibility. The general view is that if you injure someone else, you should compensate them. Unfortunately, not everyone has a pile of cash sitting in their bank account so insurance is the name of the game. This gives every innocent victim the chance to get some money to cover their medical bills and repair their property.

Unfortunately, states have never thought it a priority to keep these minimum figures under review. So as the value of the dollar has fallen through inflation, the value of the insurance pay-outs has also fallen. What were reasonably big sums of money thirty or forty years ago no longer pay for much. In Wisconsin, the last review was more than thirty years ago. But, in February 2009, the Legislature decided to catch up. The result has been a sometimes quite large increase in the Wisconsin auto insurance rates.

There was a major publicity campaign back in February so everyone should have known this change was coming. It was all carefully explained. It would mean more money for people who were injured or the families of those killed. But now people face the reality of the increases, they are shocked and angry. When there is a recession, how can premiums go up so much? The answer varies depending on who you ask. The auto insurance industry says it’s the fault of the state government. The politicians say it’s profiteering by the insurers. In a sense, it no longer matter why. The premium increases are here and people have to cope. Two facts stand out. There has been a significant increase in the number of claims made, particularly for vehicle theft and personal injuries. Fraud has also increased. It’s sometimes surprising how many people inflate or invent claims, particularly when their personal finances are under pressure. The result is that premiums go up and everyone suffers. But also remember that this question of the minimum liability requirements is not unique to Wisconsin. Sooner or later, every state is going to raise these numbers and the auto insurance industry is waiting to raise the premiums.