Super Glossary:

Force-Placed Insurance

Force-placed insurance is coverage placed by a lender when a borrower fails to maintain required insurance, usually protecting the lender's interest.

Force-Placed Insurance is an important insurance concept because it can affect how coverage is selected, priced, interpreted, or applied at claim time. In practical terms, it helps explain what the policy may do, what the insured may be responsible for, or how the insurance company may evaluate a covered situation. This term is commonly associated with Auto, Homeowners, Mortgage. For personal insurance customers, understanding Force-Placed Insurance can make it easier to compare policies, ask better questions, avoid coverage gaps, and understand what may happen before, during, or after a claim. The exact impact of Force-Placed Insurance depends on the policy form, endorsements, limits, deductibles, exclusions, state law, and the facts of the loss or account.

Example: Example: A customer reviewing a auto policy asks how Force-Placed Insurance would affect a future claim. The agent explains where the term appears in the policy and how it may change the amount paid, the coverage available, or the customer's responsibilities.

Policy Types This Applies To
Auto Homeowners Mortgage
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