If, for example, your best friend slipped on a walkway and broke his arm when he fell,
the bodily injury portion of the homeowners policy would pay for his medical care.
If you are the one who was at fault in the accident,
the bodily injury portion of your policy may include medical payments, another term used for reimbursing someone for lost wages and other costs.
The bodily injury portion of the plan is divided into two different limits, one for a single victim and another for multiple victim accidents.
If there are multiple injuries requiring medical attention, the other
bodily injury portion is used.
For example, if you were hit by an uninsured motorist while driving another person's vehicle, walking across the street or riding your bike,
the bodily injury portion of your insurance may help with your expenses in a covered incident.
This is in stark contrast to
the bodily injury portion of an auto liability policy, which only covers the expenses of the other driver (not the covered policy holder) and other passengers in the non-covered vehicle - but only in instances of liability on the part of the policy holder.
The bodily injury portion of a Kearns car insurance plan is divided into two parts, per accident and per person.
The bodily injury portion of uninsured motorist protection has two basic parts.
The bodily injury portion of your Loveland car insurance is itself split into two halves: one for the first person injured in an accident for which the policy holder is at fault; and another for all other people who may have been injured.
Like liability coverage, uninsured motorist options usually have two parts:
a bodily injury portion and a property damage portion.
The property damage liability portion of Pennsylvania auto liability policies is not split like
the bodily injury portion.
The uninsured motorist
bodily injury portion of your policy will pay for your medical expenses (up to your limits).
Not exact matches
Your insurer pays the maximum out under your standard policy for $ 15,000 in
bodily injury liability for the driver, $ 10,000 for the passenger's medical expenses, and $ 5,000 under the property damage
portion of your policy.
The liability
portion of homeowners insurance covers you against lawsuits for
bodily injury or property damage that you or family members or pets cause to other people, as well as court costs incurred and damages awarded.
Bodily injury liability can cover a certain
portion of any medical, rehabilitation, or funeral costs that arise because of a collision you caused that injured another party.
Unfortunately,
bodily injury is covered under the liability
portion of your insurance and therefore insures the other driver.
The
bodily injury liability
portion of this insurance will, again, assist in the payment of medical expenses for other parties if you are determined to be at fault in the accident.
The discounted rate applies to the liability (
bodily injury and property damage), personal
injury protection, and collision
portions of your policy.
Liability Coverage: This
portion of your policy provides protection when you are legally liable for
bodily injury or property damage that occurred as a result of an accident or incident involving you or another member of your household.
Bodily injury liability coverage is the
portion of auto insurance coverage that protects you if you are held responsible for injuring someone else in a car accident.
The residual liability insurance
portion of a basic policy — also referred to as
bodily injury and property damage liability — is designed to pay for other people's
injuries or property damage when the policyholder is responsible for the accident, but only under certain circumstances.
The liability
portion of a homeowners policy protects you against lawsuits for property damage or
bodily injury that you or members of your family cause to other people.
The liability
portion of homeowners insurance covers you against lawsuits for
bodily injury or property damage that you or family members or pets cause to other people, as well as court costs incurred and damages awarded.
The
bodily injury parts are divided into single person and single accident limits, and the property damage
portion is earmarked for per accident usage.
The
bodily injury liability
portion will cover their hospital bills and treatment costs.
Standard automotive liability coverage includes
portions dedicated to
bodily injury and to property damage.
Bodily injury liability works in conjunction with medical payments (sometimes called guest medical)
portion of your homeowners policy.
If the other party is responsible to some degree for causing the
injuries that resulted in a claim, that party becomes responsible for a
portion of the
bodily injury costs.
Bodily injury coverage itself is split into two
portions.
The liability
portion of your renters insurance policy covers you in these events, protecting you against lawsuits for
bodily injury or property damage.
If it's determined you're at fault after hitting a jaywalker, the
portion of your car insurance dedicated to
bodily injury liability would financially cover the pedestrian's
injuries or death, but only up to the limits of your insurance policy.
The
bodily injury and property damage liability
portion of the general business liability insurance PA policy generally covers physical
injury to a person other than an employee at your place of business.
The
bodily injury and property damage liability
portion of the general business liability insurance DE policy generally covers physical
injury to a person other than an employee at your place of business.
Luckily, the liability
portion of your policy will protect you (and your assets) from
bodily injury and property damage claims as well as damages you or your family members accidentally do to others.
Liability is the
portion of your insurance policy that protects your personal assets from the cost of a
bodily injury or property damage claim against you.
If a guest is injured while in your home and you are held liable, your condo insurance can cover some
portion of the
bodily injury claim, depending on your liability limit.
If you cause a car accident, the
bodily injury liability
portion of your car insurance coverage helps pay for the other party's medical expenses.
The discount is for the liability (
bodily injury and property damage), personal
injury protection, and collision
portions of your policy... typically around 70 % -85 % of your current premium charges.
The second
portion of coverage is also set aside for
bodily injury, but this time a per - accident limit.
The first number represents the individual
bodily injury liability coverage
portion of a Wisconsin insurance policy.
The first two are the
bodily injury provisions, and the third is a separate
portion dedicated to paying out for property damages caused by covered drivers in at fault accidents.
The first part of such a policy is the
bodily injury liability
portion for the other driver or first injured victim of an at - fault accident.
This
portion of your commercial general liability policy offers
bodily injury and property damage coverage related to the ownership or maintenance of business premises.
Single victim
bodily injury liability is the
portion of the policy set aside to deal with the financial cost of taking care of
injuries sustained to the other driver or a single victim of a liability accident.
These policies essentially divide the liability
portion of your auto insurance into three different categories:
bodily injury single victim,
bodily injury single accident, and property damage single accident.
Both the
bodily injury and property damage liability
portions of coverage protect not the policy holder or their vehicle, but the other driver involved in an at - fault accident any property compromised by the crash including the other driver's car and anything else like road signs or buildings.