Vocabulary
Health & Renters
Real-World Scenarios
Deductibles & Math
Auto Coverage
100

This is the monthly payment you make to maintain insurance coverage.

What is a premium?

100

This insurance covers your belongings inside an apartment.

What is renters insurance?

100

You rear-end another car. Who is usually at fault?

The driver in the back.

100

You have a $500 deductible and $3,000 in damage. How much do you pay?

$500.

100

This coverage pays for damage you cause to another person’s car.
 

What is liability coverage

200

This is the amount you must pay before insurance begins to pay.

What is a deductible?

200

DAILY DOUBLE

This is a fixed dollar amount you pay for a medical visit.

What is a copay?

200

You hit a tree. Which coverage applies?

Collision coverage.

200

You have a $1,000 deductible and $6,000 in damage. How much does insurance pay?

$5,000.

200

This coverage pays for damage to your car after you hit another vehicle.

What is collision coverage?

300

This is the maximum amount an insurance company will pay for a claim.

What is a coverage limit?

300

This insurance replaces part of your income if you cannot work.

What is disability insurance?

300

A thief steals your car. Which coverage applies?

Comprehensive coverage.

300

Your liability limit is $25,000. Damages total $40,000. How much does insurance pay?

 $25,000.

300

This coverage applies if a deer hits your car.

What is comprehensive coverage?

400

This is the concept of sharing financial risk among many policyholders.

What is risk pooling?

400

Which is typically more expensive: renters insurance or homeowners insurance?

Homeowners insurance.

400

You cause $10,000 in damage to someone else’s car. Which coverage pays?

Liability coverage.

400

If you choose a lower monthly premium, what usually happens to your deductible?

It increases.

400

This coverage protects you if the other driver has no insurance.

What is uninsured/underinsured coverage?

500

Insurance companies charge higher premiums to high-risk drivers. Why?

Because they are more likely to file claims and cost the company more money.

500

Why might a healthy 23-year-old choose a high-deductible health plan?

Lower monthly premium and lower expected medical use.

500

DAILY DOUBLE
A driver decides not to buy insurance and instead saves money. They cause $30,000 in damage. Why is this risky?

An accident can exceed savings quickly, leaving the driver responsible for large financial losses.

500

A driver has $25,000 liability coverage and causes $40,000 in total damage. How much will insurance pay, and who pays the remaining amount?

Insurance pays $25,000. The at-fault driver pays the remaining $15,000.

500

DAILY DOUBLE
A driver has liability and comprehensive coverage but no collision. They rear-end someone and damage their own car. What happens and why?

 Liability pays for the other driver’s damage. The at-fault driver pays for their own car because comprehensive does not cover collision accidents.