Glossary of Terms
This is a list of terms designed to assist you while
shopping or learning about insurance. It is not meant
to be all inclusive, but should help with your understanding
of the most common terms.
A - B - C - D - E - F - G -H - I - J - K - L - M
N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z
A
Accidental Death and Dismemberment (AD&D) Rider:
A supplement to many life insurance policies that
provides an additional cash benefit to the insured
or his/her beneficiaries if an accident causes either
the death of the insured or causes the insured to
lose any two limbs or the sight in both eyes.
Actual Cash Value: The value of property based on
the cost of repairing or replacing it with property
of the same kind and quality. Typically, actual cash
value equals the current replacement cost minus depreciation
(age, condition, length of time in use, and obsolescence).
Adjuster: A person who investigates and settles
losses for an insurance carrier.
Agent: In insurance, the person authorized to represent
the insurer in negotiating, servicing, or effecting
insurance policies.
Annual Out-of-Pocket Maximum: A dollar amount set
by the plan which puts a cap on the amount of money
the insured must pay out of his or her own pocket
for covered expenses over the course of a calendar
year.
Annuity: A contract that provides for a series
of periodic payments to be made or received at regular
intervals.
Applicant: The party applying for an insurance
policy.
Application: A printed form developed by an insurer
that includes questions about the prospective insured
and the desired insurance coverage and limits.
Assigned Risk: A risk insured through a pool of
insurers and assigned to a specific insurer. These
risks are generally considered undesirable by underwriters,
but due to state law or otherwise, they must be insured.
Auto Collision Coverage: Optional auto insurance
which pays for damage to your car caused by collision
with another car or object, or by rolling the car
over. Frequently required if you have a car loan.
Auto Comprehensive Physical Damage Coverage: Optional
auto insurance which pays for damage to your auto
caused by things other than collision or rolling
the car over, such as fire, theft, vandalism, flood
or hail. Frequently required if you have a car loan.
Automatic Premium Loan: A provision in some life
insurance policies that authorizes a policy loan
using the cash value accumulated by the insurance
policy to pay for past due premiums at the end of
the grace period. This prevents a lapse of coverage.
B
Beneficiary: Any person, persons, or other entity
designated to receive the policy benefits upon the
death of the policyholder.
Binder: A written or oral contract issued temporarily
to place insurance in force when it is not possible
to issue a new policy or endorse the existing policy
immediately. A binder is subject to the premium and
all the terms of the policy to be issued.
Binding Receipt: A premium receipt acknowledging
temporary insurance coverage immediately until the
insurance company rejects the application or approves
it and issues a policy.
Broker: A marketing specialist who represents insurance
organizations and who deals with either agents or
companies in arranging for the coverage required
by the customer.
Buy-Sell Agreements: Agreement that a deceased business
owner's interest will be sold and purchased at a
predetermined price or at a price according to a
predetermined formula.
C
Calendar Year Deductible: The amount of health care
expenses that the insured person must pay before
insurance payments for covered eligible expenses.
Cancellation: The discontinuance of an insurance
policy before its normal expiration date, either
by the insured or the company.
Case Management: A utilization management technique
that addresses the medical necessity of care as well
as alternative treatments or solutions, especially
when the patient is likely to require very expensive
treatment.
Cash Value (cash surrender value): The cash amount
payable to a life insurance policyowner in the event
of termination or cancellation of the policy before
its maturity or the insured event.
Certificate of Insurance: A statement of coverage
issued to an individual insured under a group insurance
contract, outlining the insurance benefits and principal
provisions applicable to the member.
Claim: A person's request for payment from an insurer
for a loss covered by the insurance policy.
COBRA (Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation
Act): COBRA requires organizations with twenty or
more employees to offer the continuation of group
health benefits (Medical, Dental, Vision, and Medical
Reimbursement Account) to employees (and covered
dependents) upon experiencing a "Qualifying
Event."
Employers are required to provide initial COBRA
notification to covered employees and dependents.
A letter detailing an individual's rights upon experiencing
a "qualifying event" and an explanation
of the conversion privilege. The legislation defines
the following six situations as "Qualifying
Events" that require COBRA continuation:
- Termination of Employment
- Reduction of Work Hours
- Employee's Death
- Employee's Divorce (or legal separation in some
states)
- Medicare Entitlement
- Change in "Dependent" Status
Coinsurance Provision: A specified percentage of
the cost of treatment the insured is required to
pay for all covered medical expenses remaining after
the policy's deductible has been met.
Collision Insurance: Protection against loss resulting
from any damage to the policyholder's car caused
by collision with another vehicle or object, or by
upset of the insured car, whether it was the insured's
fault or not.
Commission: The amount of money, usually a percentage
of the premiums that is paid to an insurance agent
for selling an insurance policy.
Comprehensive Auto Insurance: Protection against
loss resulting from damage to the insured auto, other
than loss by collision or upset.
Compulsory Auto Liability Insurance: Insurance laws
in some states required motorists to carry at least
certain minimum auto coverages. This is called
"compulsory" insurance.
Conditions: The part of your insurance policy that
states the obligations of the person insured and
those of the insurance company.
Contingent Beneficiary: In a life insurance policy,
the person designated to receive the policy benefits
if the primary beneficiary dies before the insured.
Contract: A legally enforceable agreement between
two or more parties.
Conversion Privilege: The right to convert or change
insurance coverage from an individual term insurance
policy to an individual whole life insurance policy.
Convertible Term Life Insurance: A type of term
life insurance that offers the policyowner the option
to exchange the term policy for a form of permanent
insurance.
Copay: The fee you pay for certain medical services
or for each prescription. For example, you may pay
$20 for an office visit or $10 to fill a prescription
and the health plan covers the balance of the charges.
(1) A fee that many insurance plans require an insured
to pay for certain medical services (such as a physician's
office visit). (2) An amount that the insured must
pay toward the cost of each prescription under a
prescription drug plan.
Creditable Coverage: The pre-existing condition
exclusion is reduced one month for every month that
a person had coverage in a previous qualifying plan
as long as the gap in coverage between the previous
plan and the new plan is 63 days or less.
D
Declination: The insurer's refusal to insure an
individual after careful evaluation of the application
for insurance and any other pertinent factors.
Deductibles: The portion of the loss that the policyholder
agrees to pay out of pocket, before the insurance
company pays the amount they are obligated to cover.
For example, if the covered claim is $1000 and your
deductible is $250, you pay $250 and your company
will pay $750. Deductibles help to keep insurance
rates reasonable. Raising the amount of the deductible
lowers the cost of insurance.
Dependent: A person for whom the insured has some
legal obligation to. For most plans, it is the insured's
spouse and/or children. Some plans also allow non-traditional
spousal relationships (significant other, life-partner,
etc.) to be considered a dependent with some additional
certifying paperwork.
Depreciation: Reduction in the value of property
due to age and use.
Double Indemnity: A provision in a life insurance
policy, subject to specified conditions and exclusions,
under the terms of which double the face amount of
the policy is payable if the death of the insured
is the result of an accident. In general, the conditions
are that the insured's death occurs prior to a specified
age and results from bodily injury effected solely
through external, violent and accidental means independently
and exclusively of all other cause, within 60 or
90 days after such injury.
E
Emergency Room Visit: A visit to a hospital for
treatment of an accidental injury or for emergency
medical care. To qualify as an emergency, the symptoms
must be sudden, severe and require immediate medical
attention. Some states judge emergencies by the "prudent
layperson" law, meaning that the health plan
must cover a trip to the emergency room "if
a prudent layperson, acting reasonably, would have
believed that an emergency medical condition existed." Keep
in mind that some plans won't cover a trip to the
emergency room if the symptoms appeared more than
24 hours earlier.
Endorsement: Attachment or addendum to an insurance
policy; an endorsement changes the contract's original
terms.
Exclusions and Limitations: Conditions, situations
and services not covered by the health plan.
Extended Term Life Insurance: A nonforfeiture benefit
under which the net cash value of the policy is used
to purchase term insurance for the amount of coverage
available under the original policy.
F
Face Amount: The amount stated in the life insurance
policy as the death benefit.
G
Grace Period: The specified length of time, after
a Life or Health premium payment is due in which
the insured may make the payment and keep the policy
in force. (Usually 30 days.)
Group Health Insurance: An insurance plan designed
for a group, such as employees of a single employer.
Insurance is provided to them under a single policy.
Guaranteed Renewable Policy: A health insurance
policy that the insurer is required to renew -- as
long as premiums are paid -- at least until the insured
attains the age limit specified in the policy, or
the policy is cancelled by the insured. The insurer
may increase the premium rate for any class of guaranteed
renewable policies.
Guaranty Association: Established by each state
to support insurers and protect consumers in the
case of insurer insolvency, guaranty associations
are funded by insurers through assessments.
H
HIPPA - Health Insurance Portability and Accountability
Act of 1996: Under this federal law (known as HIPAA),
group health plans cannot deny coverage based solely
on an individual's health status. This law also gives
employees who change or lose their jobs better access
to health coverage, guarantees renewability and availability
to certain employees and limits exclusions for pre-existing
conditions. For example, under this law, group health
plans must credit any employee the amount of time
that they spent on any health plan prior to the new
plan, which is known as "prior credible coverage." A
pre-existing condition will be covered without a
waiting period when an employee joins a new group
plan if the employee has been insured for the previous
12 months with credible health insurance, with no
lapse in coverage of 63 days or more. This means
that if an employee has been insured for 12 months
or more, the employee will be able to go from one
job to another and his or her pre-existing coverage
will remain intact -- without additional waiting
periods. However, if an employee has a pre-existing
condition and was not covered previously for 12 months
before joining a new plan, the longest the employee
will have to wait for their pre-existing coverage
to be covered is 12 months.
HMO (Health Maintenance Organization): A health
care financing and delivery system that provides
comprehensive health care for subscribing members
in a particular geographic area using managed care
techniques. Most HMOs require that you only utilize
physicians within their network, often going so far
as to require you to choose a primary care physician
who directs most courses of your treatment.
I
Indemnification: Compensation to the victim of a
loss, in whole or in part, by payment, repair, or
replacement. Indemnity. Legal principle that specifies
an insured should not collect more than the actual
cash value of a loss but should be restored to approximately
the same financial position as existed before the
loss.
Insolvent: Having insufficient financial resources
(assets) to meet financial obligations (liabilities).
Insurable Risk: The conditions that make a risk
insurable are (a) the peril insured against must
produce a definite loss not under the control of
the insured, (b) there must be a large number of
homogeneous exposures subject to the same perils,
(c) the loss must be calculable and the cost of insuring
it must be economically feasible, (d) the peril must
be unlikely to affect all insureds simultaneously,
and (e) the loss produced by a risk must be definite
and have a potential to be financially serious.
Incontestable Clause: A life insurance policy wording
that provides a time limit (e.g. two years) on the
insurer's right to dispute a policy's validity based
on material misstatements in the application.
Insurable Interest: Any interest a person has in
property that is the subject of insurance, so that
damage to this property would cause the insured a
financial loss.
Insurance Company: An organization that has been
chartered by a governmental entity to transact the
business of insurance.
Insured: A person or organization covered by an
insurance policy, including the "named insured" and
any other parties for whom protection is provided
under the policy terms.
Insurer: The party to the insurance contract who
promises to pay losses or benefits. Also, any corporation
engaged primarily in the business of furnishing insurance
to the public.
Irrevocable Beneficiary: A named beneficiary whose
rights to life insurance policy proceeds cannot be
canceled or changed by the policyowner unless the
beneficiary consents.
J
K
Key Employee: Insurance Protection of a business
against financial loss caused by the death or disablement
of a vital member of the company, usually individuals
possessing special managerial or technical skill
or expertise. Also called key executive insurance.
L
Lapse: Termination of a policy due to nonpayment
of premiums.
Liability: A legal obligation to compensate a person
harmed by one's acts or omissions.
Liability Coverage: Insurance that provides compensation
for a harm or wrong to a third party for which an
insured is legally obligated to pay.
Life Insurance: Insurance that pays a specified
sum of money to designated beneficiaries if the insured
person dies during the policy term.
Lifetime Maximum: The maximum amount of money a
plan will pay towards healthcare services over the
course of the insured's lifetime.
Loss: The happening of the event for which insurance
pays.
Loss Expense - Allocated: Handling expenses, such
as legal or independent adjuster fees, paid by an
insurance company in settling a claim which can be
definitely charged to that particular claim.
Loss Expense - Unallocated: Salaries and other expenses
incurred in connection with the operation of a claim
department of an insurance carrier which cannot be
charged to individual claims.
M
Medical Payments Coverage: Medical and funeral expense
coverage for bodily injuries sustained from or while
occupying an insured vehicle, regardless of the insured's
negligence.
Misrepresentation: Act of making, issuing, circulating
or causing to be issued or circulated an estimate,
an illustration, a circular or a statement of any
kind that does not represent the correct policy terms,
dividends or share of surplus or the name or title
for any policy or class of policies that does not
in fact reflect its true nature.
N
Negligence: Failure to use a generally acceptable
level of care and caution.
Network: A group of doctors, hospitals and other
health-care providers contracting with a health plan,
usually to provide care at special rates and to handle
paperwork with the health plan.
No-fault Insurance: A system of compensation enacted
by law in many states under which indemnification
is made by the insured's own insurance company regardless
of who is at fault. Details of this system vary significantly
from state to state.
Non-Formulary Drugs: Non-formulary drugs often require
a higher copayment. Non-formulary drugs are those
that have not yet been reviewed or have been denied
formulary status, typically because they offer no
extra benefit over the drugs already on a plan's
formulary list.
O
Offer and Acceptance: The offer may be made by
the applicant by signing the application, paying
the first premium and, if necessary, submitting to
physical examination. Policy issuance, as applied
for, constitutes acceptance by the company. Or the
offer may be made by the company when no premium
payment is submitted with the application. Premium
payment on the offered policy then constitutes acceptance
by the applicant.
Out-of-Network: Health care services received outside
the HMO, POS or PPO network.
Out-of-Pocket Expense: Any medical care costs not
covered by insurance, which must be paid by the insured.
P
Paid-up Policy: An in-force life insurance policy
for which no further premium payments are required.
Peril: The cause of loss or damage.
Personal Injury Protection: First-party no-fault
coverage in which an insurer pays, within the specified
limits, the wage loss, medical, hospital and funeral
expenses of the insured.
Physical Damage: Damage to or loss of the automobile
resulting from collision, fire, theft or other perils.
Permanent Insurance: A general term for ordinary
life and whole life insurance policies that remain
in effect as long as their premiums are paid.
Personal Property Insurance: Protects against the
loss of, or damage to property other than real property
(real estate) caused by specific perils.
Point-of-Service Plan: An HMO plan that also incorporates
an indemnity plan option allowing members to obtain
medical care from providers outside of the HMO network
at a reduced benefit and at greater out-of-pocket
expense.
Policy: The written forms that make up the insurance
contract between an insured and insurer. A policy
includes the terms and conditions of the coverage,
the perils insured or excluded, etc.
Policy Declarations: The part of the insurance
contract that lists basic underwriting information,
including the insured's name, address and description
of insured locations as well as policy limits.
Policy Limits: The maximum amount an insured may
collect or for which an insured is protected, under
the terms of the policy.
Policy Loan: A loan from a life insurer to the
owner of a policy that has a cash value.
Policyholder: The person who buys insurance.
Policyowner: An individual with an ownership interest
in an insurance policy.
Policy Period: The amount of time an insurance
contract or policy lasts.
PPO (Preferred Provider Organization): An organization
where providers are under contract to an insurance
company or health plan to provide care at a discounted
or negotiated rate. Typically, you can see any doctor
in the PPO network without requiring special approval,
and you usually do not need to choose a primary care
physician. Most PPOs will also allow you to seek
care outside of the PPO network; however, the benefits
are usually reduced and the insured has a greater
out-of-pocket expense.
Pre-Existing Condition: (1) According to most individual
health insurance policies, an injury that occurred
or a sickness that first appeared or manifested itself
before the policy was issued and that was not disclosed
on the application for insurance. (2) According to
most group health insurance policies, a condition
(excluding pregnancy) for which an individual received
medical care during the three months to six month
immediately prior to the enrollment of his coverage.
Pre-Existing Conditions Provision: A health insurance
policy provision stating that benefits will not be
paid for any illness and/or condition that existed
prior to one becoming an insured under the particular
health plan in question, until the insured has been
covered under the policy for a specified period.
Preferred Risk: A risk whose physical condition,
occupation, mode of living and other characteristics
indicate a prospect for longevity superior to that
of the average longevity of unimpaired lives of the
same age.
Premium: The price for insurance coverage as described
in the insurance policy for a specific period of
time.
Primary Beneficiary: The person designated as the
first to receive the proceeds of a life insurance
policy upon the death of the insured.
Primary Care Physician (PCP): A general or family
practitioner who serves as the insured's personal
physician and first contact with a managed care system.
The PCP will usually direct the course of your treatment
and/or refer you to other doctors and/or specialists
in the network.
Probationary Period: The length of time that a new
group member must wait before becoming eligible to
enroll in a group insurance plan.
Proof of Loss: A sworn statement that usually must
be furnished by the insured to an insurer before
any loss under a policy may be paid.
Property Damage Coverage: An agreement by an insurance
carrier to protect an insured against legal liability
for damage by an insured automobile to the property
of another.
Protection Amount: The face amount of a life insurance
policy, or amount of money that will be paid to a
beneficiary upon the death of an insured. This amount
will be reduced by the amount of any outstanding
policy loan.
Q
R
Rate: The pricing factor upon which the insurance
buyer's premium is based.
Rated Policy: Sometimes called an "extra-risk" policy,
an insurance policy issued at a higher-than-standard
premium rate to cover the extra risk where, for example,
an insured has had a DUI or other traffic violations.
Rebating: Giving any valuable consideration, usually
all or part of the commission, to the prospect or
insured as an inducement to buy or renew. Insurance
rebating is prohibited by law.
Reimbursement: The payment of an amount of money
by an insurance policy for a covered loss.
Reinstatement: The process by which a life insurance
company puts back in force a policy that has lapsed
or has been canceled for nonpayment of premium.
Renewable Term Life
Insurance: A renewable life policy permits
the owner of the policy to automatically renew
the policy beyond its original term by acceptance
of a premium for a new policy term without evidence
of insurability.
Revocable Beneficiary: A life insurance policy
whose designation as beneficiary can be revoked or
changed by the policyowner at any time prior to the
insured's death.
Riders: An addition to an insurance policy that
becomes a part of the contract.
Risk: The possibility or chance of loss or injury.
S
Salvage: Recovery made by an insurance company by
the sale of property which has been taken over from
the insured as a part of loss settlement.
Settlement: An agreement between a claimant or beneficiary
to an insurance policy and the insurance company
regarding the amount and method of a claim or benefit
payment.
Standard Industrial Classification (SIC): The Standard
Industrial Classification (SIC) system is a series
of number codes that attempts to classify all business
establishments by the types of products or services
they make available. Establishments engaged in the
same activity, whatever their size or type of ownership,
are assigned the same SIC code. These definitions
are important for standardization. Insurance companies
use SIC codes to determine specific rates for various
industries. HealthInsurance.com uses these codes
to ensure that you receive the best possible rate
for your occupation.
Standard Risk: A person who, according to a company's
underwriting standards, is entitled to purchase insurance
protection without extra rating or special restrictions.
Standard Risk Rate: The risk category that is composed
of proposed insureds who have a likelihood of loss
that is not significantly greater than average.
Substandard Risk: A risk that cannot meet the normal
requirements of an auto insurance policy. Protection
is provided in consideration of a waiver, a special
policy form, or a higher premium charge. Substandard
risks may include those persons who are rated because
of poor driving habits.
Stop-Loss Provision: A major medical policy provision
under which the insurer will pay 100 percent of the
insured's eligible medical expenses after the insured
has incurred a specified amount of out-of-pocket
expenses in deductible and coinsurance payments.
T
Term Insurance: Life insurance under which the benefit
is payable only if the insured dies during a specified
period. If the insured survives beyond that period,
coverage ceases. This type of policy does not build
up any cash or nonforfeiture values.
Theft Limit (or Inside Policy Limits): The highest
amount an insurance company will pay on certain items
of personal property. For instance, some policies
have a $5,000 limit for computers. If an item would
cost more than the limit to replace.
U
Underwriter: (a) A company that receives the premiums
and accepts responsibility for the fulfillment of
the policy contract; (b) the company employee who
decides whether or not the company should assume
a particular risk; (c) the agent who sells the policy.
Underwriting: The process of reviewing applications
for coverage. Applications that are accepted are
then classified by the underwriter according to the
type and degree of risk.
Unilateral: A distinguishing characteristic of a
life insurance contract in that it is only the insurance
company that pledges anything. The policyowner does
not even promise to pay premiums; therefore, it is
really a one-sided contract favoring the policyowner.
Uninsured (Underinsured) Motorist Coverage: A form
of insurance that pays the policy holder and passengers
in his/her car for bodily injury caused by the owner
or operator of an uninsured or inadequately insured
automobile.
Uninsurable Risk: One not acceptable for insurance
due to excessive risk.
Universal Life: Flexible premium, two-part contract
containing renewable term insurance and a cash value
account that generally earns interest at a higher
rate than a traditional policy. The interest rate
varies. Premiums are deposited in the cash value
accounts after the company deducts its fee and a
monthly cost for the term coverage.
Urgent Care: Urgent care is appropriate when a medical
urgency arises which necessitates immediate care,
but has not reached the level of extreme emergency.
Most managed care plans require you to seek urgent
care at a participating urgent care facility or hospital.
Usual, Customary and Reasonable Fee: The maximum
dollar amount of a covered expense that is considered
eligible for reimbursement under a major medical
policy.
V
W
Waiver: An agreement attached to a
policy which exempts from coverage certain disabilities
or injuries that otherwise would be covered by the
policy.
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