What is excess liability?
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Insurance coverage that is written in excess of
primary insurance. It is designed to increase
the limits of liability, thereby providing
catastrophe coverage. Excess liability coverage
does not respond to a loss until the amount of
the loss exceeds (or exhausts) any existing
primary policy limits. Example:
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A primary $500,000 liability policy is written, and
excess insurance is written for $2 million excess of the
primary.
The primary policy would pay all losses within
$500,000 and the excess policy would pay losses in
excess of the primary coverage, up to the excess policy
limit of $2 million.
What coverage
provided? (1) Protection for covered claims by
others for personal injury or property damage caused by
you, members of your family/household, or hazards on
your property for which you are legally liable, (2)
Personal liability coverage for occurrences on or off
your premises, (3) An additional layer of protection
above your primary auto policy against auto-related
liabilities, (4) Protection against non-business related
personal injury liabilities such as slander, libel,
wrongful eviction or false arrest, (5)Legal defense
costs for a covered loss. Lawyer fees and associated
court costs are covered, (6)Worldwide coverage- no
matter where you go, with the only exception being
situations involving foreign ownership of dwellings or
cars. |