I sustained a foot injury last week but actual coverage starts August 1. In other words, I am paying for insurance coverage but I am not deriving the benefit.
Legal and common.
See, it’s not your policy – it’s your employer’s policy. On August 1st when the coverage starts, they have to pay the insurance company in full, for the month, for you. So they take the money out of your check in July, so they have it, when the time comes to PAY for it.
But the insurance company itself, hasn’t actually been PAID yet for you. So you did not PAY for the coverage – you set the money aside to pay for it. Not the same thing at all.
Your premiums are probably paid in advance. If your injury was on-the-job, WC applies.
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Legal and common.
See, it’s not your policy – it’s your employer’s policy. On August 1st when the coverage starts, they have to pay the insurance company in full, for the month, for you. So they take the money out of your check in July, so they have it, when the time comes to PAY for it.
But the insurance company itself, hasn’t actually been PAID yet for you. So you did not PAY for the coverage – you set the money aside to pay for it. Not the same thing at all.
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Yes, it’s pretty common because the company owes the insurance company in July for coverage that starts in August. It would be odd for them to pay the premium and deduct it. If they owe it then why wouldn’t you?
No big deal though because you would just make the claim on your current insurance. That would be the plan you planned on keeping until your new coverage went into effect on August 1st.
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You always pay insurance in advance for whatever it is, a home, a car, belongings, health. When you pay insurance, you sometimes have a waiting period. If yours is only 30 days that is very good.
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