Umbrella Insurance

What is it? Why do I need it?
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Any number of occurrences could wipe out your primary
liability limits and leave your assets vulnerable. You work too hard
to let that happen! Protect yourself with Umbrella coverage.
Umbrella liability insurance
provides excess liability coverage over several of the insured's primary liability policies. Most
umbrella policies provide coverage that is broader than the insured's
primary policies. An excess liability policy may be what is called
a following form policy, which means it is subject to the same terms
as the underlying policies; it may be a self-contained policy, which
means it is subject to it's own terms only; or it may be a
combination of these two types of excess policies.
Umbrella policies have
three functions: (1) To provide additional limits above the "each
occurrence" limit of the insured's primary policies; (2) To take
the place of primary insurance when
primary aggregate limits are reduced or exhausted; and (3) To provide
broader coverage for some claims that would not be covered by the
insured's primary insurance policies, which would be subject
to the policy retention.
Most umbrella liability policies contain one comprehensive insuring
agreement. The agreement usually states it will pay the ultimate
net loss, which is the total amount in excess of the primary limit
for which the insured becomes legally obligated to pay for the damages
of bodily injury, property damage, personal injury and advertising
injury.
Limits of insurance
All umbrella liability policies contain an each occurrence limit
of insurance. Some umbrella liability policies may have a separate
limit that applies to all personal and advertising injury for one
person or for the organization. Also, some policies are written with
aggregate limits for only one type of loss. Other policies may have
one or more aggregates for all losses. Umbrella policies can be written
with several different variations of the aggregate limits. There
are no standard umbrella policies.
Pay on behalf
This is the insuring agreement used in some umbrella policies. The
agreement promises to make direct payment on behalf of the insured
for those sums of money the insured becomes legally obligated to
pay because of liability imposed upon the insured by law, or assumed
under contract.
Indemnity
This is the insuring agreement clause found in most umbrella policies
as opposed to the pay on behalf agreement. When the indemnity insurance
clause is used, the insurer will indemnify or reimburse the insured
for those sums of money the insured becomes obligated to pay by reason
of liability imposed upon the insured by law, or assumed under contract.
Self Insured Retention
The self-insured retention is the amount of the loss an insured
must pay before the umbrella policy would be required to respond.
The self-insured retention would only apply when a loss is excluded
from coverage under the primary policy, but not excluded under the
umbrella policy.
Required Underlying Limits
Required underlying limits are a requirement of the Insurer. It
requires the Insured to have certain types of coverage, minimum limits
and carriers that meet a specific Best rating.
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