TYPES OF INSURANCE
Insurance comes in many varieties. Categories include property, liability, homeowners’, automobile, medical, life, workers’ compensation, and marine.
Property Insurance
Property insurance is the modern form of the fire insurance that was sold by early insurance companies. The name has changed because the coverage has changed. No longer are just the losses resulting from fire protected by property insurance. Such losses as those from windstorm, theft, vandalism, and water damage are also covered.
Liability insurance is the most important kind of business insurance. A liability is a duty one person owes another, or is liable for, for some special reason. Liability insurance pays an individual or a business for liabilities that result from unforeseen situations.
Homeowners’ Insurance
Homeowners’ insurance is a combination offering both property and liability coverage. Usually it includes protection for a person’s home, any other buildings on the property, and for the buildings’ contents and personal belongings except automobiles and pets. The policy can be written to include the property of guests. If disaster strikes, homeowners’ insurance usually pays a family’s living expenses until they get settled at home once again.
Automobile Insurance
Automobile insurance is the most complicated kind of insurance purchased by individuals. It combines several kinds of property and liability coverage. The standard automobile policy includes collision insurance, covering property damage to a car when it is struck by another vehicle, and comprehensive insurance, covering general property damage that occurs when an automobile is damaged by something other than another vehicle.
Medical insurance pays the costs of hospitalization and physicians’ fees for insured individuals who are injured or become ill.
Life insurance is designed to insure lives, though it frequently includes coverage for major disabilities such as the loss of limbs or organs. There are basically three kinds of life insurance that may be purchased by individuals for themselves or others or by employers for their employees.
Workers’ Compensation
Workers’ compensation is a special state-controlled insurance purchased by employers for the benefit of their employees. Like general liability and medical payment liability insurance, it pays for medical treatment required by employees of a company according to a state-regulated schedule of benefits. The object is to prevent employees from the need to sue their employers if they are injured and to compensate workers for losses from accidents on the job.
Marine Insurance
The oldest form of insurance that scholars have been able to document, marine insurance now includes much more than the shared risk of ships’ cargo. It might best be called transportation insurance because variations of the coverage include protection for ships, trucks, railroads, and aircraft. Underwriters generally divide it into two types: ocean marine, which deals with every kind of water conveyance, and inland marine for truck and rail cargo.