Cancelling an insurance policy is simple, but doing it correctly matters: line up replacement coverage first, notify your insurer in writing with an effective date, and confirm any...
An insurance binder is a short-term document that proves your coverage is in force while the full policy is being issued. It is temporary but legally binding proof of insurance, of...
Renters and homeowners insurance both protect your belongings and your liability, but only homeowners insurance covers the building itself. That single difference is the biggest on...
Self-insurance means setting aside your own money to cover a risk instead of buying a policy for it. It can be a smart choice for small, predictable losses you could comfortably ab...
If your insurer mishandles a claim, delays payment, or treats you unfairly, you can file a complaint with your state department of insurance, the regulator that oversees insurers w...
Liability insurance pays for the harm you cause to other people — their injuries or their property — along with the legal costs that follow. It is the part of your auto, home, and...
Insurance exclusions are the specific losses your policy will not pay for, and reading them is the only reliable way to know what you are actually covered for. Most coverage surpri...
You can buy insurance through an agent or directly from an insurer online, and the right choice depends on how much guidance you want versus how much you prefer to self-serve. Both...
The difference between a captive and an independent insurance agent comes down to how many companies they represent, and that shapes how widely they can shop for you. A captive age...
Underinsurance means carrying a policy that pays out far less than your actual loss — and it is one of the most expensive insurance mistakes, because you usually discover it only w...
An insurance score is a number, based largely on your credit history, that many insurers use to help predict how likely you are to file a claim. Where allowed, it can meaningfully...
Going without required insurance can expose you to fines, license or registration suspension, and most seriously, full personal responsibility for a loss your policy would have pai...
A grace period is a short window after a missed insurance premium during which your coverage stays in force, giving you time to pay before the policy lapses. Missing a payment does...
A rider or endorsement is a written add-on that changes your base insurance policy. It can add, remove, or adjust coverage so your protection fits your real life. Think of it as th...
Natural disasters are where coverage gaps bite hardest, because standard home insurance excludes some of the biggest ones, notably floods and earthquakes, which need separate polic...
Choosing insurance comes down to one question: what loss could you not afford to pay for out of your own pocket? Insure those risks well, spend less on the rest, and you will avoid...
How much insurance you need depends on your assets, your income, and who depends on you — not a single one-size-fits-all number. The goal is enough coverage to absorb a worst-case...
You can lower your insurance premiums without giving up the protection that matters. Raise deductibles sensibly, bundle policies, shop around, and claim every discount you qualify...
Insurance companies set your rate by estimating risk — how likely you are to file a claim and how large that claim might be. Your premium is really a prediction about your future....
The costliest insurance mistakes are usually the quiet ones: underinsuring to save a little now, never shopping around, and not reading your own policy. None of them feel urgent un...
To compare insurance quotes fairly, give every insurer the exact same coverage details and limits. Comparing apples to apples is the only way to see who is truly cheapest. A lower...
Bundling home and auto with the same insurer usually earns a multi-policy discount on both, but it isn't automatically the cheapest option. Bundling makes sense when the combined p...
Switching insurers can save real money, but the key is to switch without a gap: line up and start the new policy before you cancel the old one. A lapse, even a single day, can leav...
Your deductible is the amount you pay out of pocket before insurance starts paying — and choosing it is a trade-off. A higher deductible lowers your premium but increases what you...
Major life events — marriage, a new baby, a new home, a new car, a new business — change what you need to insure, so they are the natural moments to review and update your coverage...