Single and multiple
victim bodily injury limits are $ 15,000 and $ 30,000, respectively.
Not exact matches
Split
limit policies have separate
limits of coverage and deductibles for single
victim bodily injury, single accident
bodily injury, or single accident property damage.
The minimum
limit as set by the state for single
victim bodily injury is $ 25,000, and the
limit per accident for cases in which multiple people are hurt or killed is $ 50,000.
An accident with multiple
victims would only use the multiple
victim bodily injury coverage and not the single
victim coverage, so $ 65,000 makes these plans equivalent in their maximum value to split
limit policies.
Single accident
bodily injury liability protection is the
limit of a policy set aside for responding to any and all
injuries suffered by other
victims of an at fault accident.
The three part split form auto liability insurance plan contains separate
limits and deductibles for single accident liability for the following three areas: single
victim bodily injury, multiple
victim,
bodily injury, and property damage.
The main beneficiaries of the increased minimum
limits passed into law by the Maryland Senate would be the
victims of
injury auto accidents whose medical expenses exceeded the old liability
limits and who did not carry adequate uninsured or underinsured motorist
bodily injury coverage.
The numbers in order are the minimum
limits for
bodily injury single
victim,
bodily injury multiple
victim, and property damage.
In Indiana, the minimum
limits of liability protection for all drivers are $ 25,000 for single
victim bodily injury, $ 50,000 for multiple
victim bodily injury, and $ 10,000 for property damage [1].
The main beneficiaries of the increased minimum
limits passed into law by the Maryland Senate would be the
victims of
injury auto accidents whose medical expenses exceeded the old Maryland liability
limits and who did not carry adequate uninsured or underinsured motorist
bodily injury coverage.
Those three parts are all single accidents
limits; and they are single
victim bodily injury, multiple
victim bodily injury, and property damage liability plans.
Most
bodily injury liability comes with
limits, so
victims can not sue you for amounts well beyond your coverage and means.
The
bodily injury portion of the plan is divided into two different
limits, one for a single
victim and another for multiple
victim accidents.