Insurance basics
Auto Insurance
Health Insurance
Renters
Wild card
100

A payment made to the insurance company, often monthly, to keep the policy active.

What is a premium?

100

 This optional coverage pays for damage to your vehicle resulting from a collision with another vehicle or object, even if you are at fault.

What is collision coverage?

100

The fixed dollar amount a patient pays for a covered service at the time of each visit, like to a doctor's office or when picking up medicine.

What is a copayment (or co-pay)?

100

This type of insurance protects a tenant's personal property in case of damage or theft.

What is renters insurance?

100

Renters) The specific type of policy endorsement that removes depreciation and allows a tenant to replace their ten-year-old laptop with a brand new one.

What is Replacement Cost Value (RCV)

200

A payment made to the insurance company, often monthly, to keep the policy active.

What is a premium?

200

 This type of coverage is legally required in most states and pays for injuries and property damage you cause to other people in an accident.

What is liability coverage?

200

The percentage of medical costs you must pay for a covered service after you've met your deductible, such as 20% of the bill.

What is coinsurance?

200

This coverage pays the full cost to repair or replace a damaged item with a brand new one of similar quality, without factoring in depreciation.

What is replacement cost value (RCV)?

200

The maximum amount you are financially responsible for in a calendar year; once this limit is reached, the insurance plan covers 100% of all further covered services.

What is the out-of-pocket maximum

300

The amount a patient must pay to a provider before health insurance starts to pay.

What is a deductible?

300

This coverage pays for damage to your car from things that are not collisions, such as theft, vandalism, fire, hail, or hitting a deer.

What is comprehensive coverage?

300

This plan offers more flexibility, allowing you to see both in-network and out-of-network providers (though at a higher cost for the latter) and typically does not require referrals.

What is a Preferred Provider Organization (PPO)?

300

The formula used to calculate ACV: Replacement Cost minus this equals the payout (before the deductible is applied)

What is depreciation?

300

This federal insurance is for people 65 years old or with certain disabilities.

What is Medicare?

400

In insurance terms, this is the specific term for the uncertainty or chance of loss occurring.

What is risk?

400

This coverage protects you if you are in an accident caused by a driver who has no insurance or insufficient insurance to cover the costs.

What is uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage?

400

 A health plan that combines aspects of an HMO and a PPO, requiring a PCP referral for in-network care but allowing out-of-network options at a higher cost.

What is a Point of Service (POS) plan?

400

The value used to calculate a claim payout when depreciation is factored into the item's worth at the time of the loss.

What is Actual Cash Value (ACV)?

400

This type of health plan requires in-network use and a PCP referral.

What is an HMO (Health Maintenance Organization)?

500

The initial portion of a covered loss or medical expense that the insured is responsible for covering before the insurer's liability begins.

What is a deductible?

500

This state system requires your own insurance to pay for your medical expenses and lost wages after an accident, regardless of who was at fault.

What is no-fault insurance (or Personal Injury Protection/PIP)?

500

This 2010 law expanded Medicaid and prevents insurers from rejecting coverage based on a patient's pre-existing condition.

What is the Affordable Care Act (ACA) (or Obamacare)?

500

This type of policy may pay the ACV first, and then pay the remaining difference to reach the RCV after the policyholder submits receipts for the new items.

What is a replacement cost value (RCV)

500

Your percentage of costs you must pay after meeting your deductible.

What is co-insurance?