Grisel
I will check on this question and get back to you.
Jan
Thanks for providing the entire question. It now makes sense and I can provide an answer.
This is a coinsurance question which means you have to apply the coinsurance formula. Coinsurance does not apply the deductible. You follow the equation which calculates the percent of loss the policy will cover. Also, ACV or replacement cost does not figure into this question - only coinsurance.
Apply the formula and let me know if you are able to get the correct answer.
Jan
I have the same question. I took the coinsurance into account and came up with 3500. I am puzzled since there is a deductible of 500 for wind, consequently shouldn t the answer be 3000. thank you for your clarification.
Sandro,
You do not use the deductible when you are calculating coinsurance. The deductible is part of the coinsurance formula.
Jan
So the formula should go $70k(insured amount) divided by $100k(amount needed) =.7 or 70%
70% of $5000(damage) = $3500 minus your deductible($500) = $3000.
Am I missing something here?
Stephanie, my understanding is that Joe's PIP will pick up the first $10,000 and his Medial Payment will pick up $1,000. The remaining $31,000 is picked up by UM. UM covers hit & run accidents, not just underinsured or un-insured. I'm kinda sure but not positive and hopefully an instructor can explain better.
Good explanation Grisel! You're exactly right. It's a sure sign you understand the concept when you can explain it to another student.
To add to your explanation - UM covers a hit and run because there is no insurance available from the at-fault party. Even if they had coverage, there is no way of knowing since they left the scene of the accident.
Jan
Thank you, Jan. Your additional knowledge further explains the reasons for the calculation.