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subject: Techniques For Lessening Your Family's Cost Of Health And Accident Coverage [print this page]


Techniques For Lessening Your Family's Cost Of Health And Accident Coverage

You may be able to stopover spending every year on your health and accident insurance policy. You might be able to use certain tricks and get lower insurance prices. Combining your family's insurance coverage and a getting a combined singe policy may be the most cost effective approach. However, in many cases families will do better with two or more separate plans.

Here are some of the circumstances in when buying separate individual accident and health insurance policies might be more cost effective include when you need to insure: A parent and one child family needing pregnancy coverage An adult or adults over 49 needing coverage for a kid Families where the wife or husband is older by ten years or more usually when something seems almost the same as another thing yet costs much less, it is a clue that the value or quality is different. This is usually true with health coverage, however in many cases it is not. Sometimes the difference in price says more about the way the insurance carrier calculates their prices than it does about the quality of the coverage.

Getting different health and accident insurance plans does have a potential downside. In some plans, there are limitations on deductibles and other cost shares when family members are insured on the same plan. These down sides need to be weighed against any premium savings you get by placing your family members on separate plans.

The reason that buying separate or individual health and accident policies is a less expensive strategy for certain families is that medical insurance carrier calculates their prices using different methods. This means that certain families will get a better premium with certain calculation methods.

Some insurers will calculate the premium for each family member and just add those prices together to determine the premiums for a family. Other times a carrier will calculate the cost based on the age of the younger spouse. Other insurers will determine the rate based on the age of the older spouse.

If carriers determine premiums for their health care policies based on the age of the older adult and the number of people to be insured, buying healthcare insurance for one child and an adult can mean that you pay the same rate for the child as one would pay for an adult. The only way to pay the lower child rate for the child is to get the child a separate health care insurance policy. A family like this may pay less buying separate insurance policies or by buying a plan where the prices are determined for each member of the family separately.

Families that want pregnancy coverage will often save money by covering the future mother-to-be by herself. Many of the health coverage policies that include pregnancy benefits will include other benefits that other family members will not need. Parents in their fifties and sixties who have kids often pay more when they cover their entire family on the same plan.

Some insurance companies will determine a rate based on the older spouse's age. Some companies compute their prices based on the age of the younger spouse. Shop around if there's ten years or more between the age or you and your spouse.

Big families generally save money by buying one plan and with a company, that offers a family rate. Carriers that calculate their premiums by adding together the prices for each family member together can cost them too much.

It is important that you shop around when searching for medical care insurance. Different company use different methods of calculating premiums. You may be pleasantly surprised at the price you find when you look at other medical care coverage company's premiums.

by: Alston Balkcom




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