No-Fault Insurance vs. At-Fault Insurance

RECENT NEWS
AlphaNinja  Dec 3  Comment 
Quote of the da y is from Jesper Parnevik, he of the "silly hat" fame.  As the man who introduced the couple, he is NOT HAPPY with Tiger's treatment of his former nanny.  Specifically, he refers to Elin chasing Tiger down with a golf club in...
Insurance Journal  Nov 25  Comment 
The New York State Insurance Department is proposing new regulations for no-fault auto insurance coverage in Empire State, in a move the state’s top regulator says will help reduce ...
Sydney Morning Herald  Nov 23  Comment 
Disabled people are a step closer to getting fully funded care, with the government announcing it will conduct a study into a no-fault insurance scheme.
FiercePharma  Nov 11  Comment 
Who's at fault for the slow-to-market H1N1 vaccine? USA Today asked consumers, and more than half of them blamed drug companies. Some 62 percent said they blame pharma either a great deal or moderately. The government, by contrast, got 58 percent...
Insurance Journal  Nov 6  Comment 
No-fault payments for medical claims by auto accident victims in New York have seen a dramatic increase over the last several years, one industry group says, and the state and insurance companies ...
Sydney Morning Herald  Oct 25  Comment 
THE society doyenne Karin Upton Baker says lenders should never have let her owe them $18 million because they knew she was not earning enough to repay it.
Sydney Morning Herald  Oct 20  Comment 
Motorcyclists come out second best in road smashes regardless of whether or not they are at fault.
Cloud Computing  Oct 15  Comment 
When application performance is not what the cloud customer expected, who’s at fault? The cloud provider’s infrastructure? The application owner’s code? The platform vendor’s deployment tools? The external services the application uses?...
The Economist  Oct 13  Comment 
Was a global crisis inevitable? PICKING up on last week's discussion of the role global imbalances did (or did not) play in generating crisis conditions, here are two interesting new contributions to the debate....
Sydney Morning Herald  Oct 7  Comment 
There is growing pressure on the Rudd government to set up a no-fault disability insurance scheme.
Suggest a News Source
Topic
Top news source/blog that we're missing
Why do you recommend this news source?
Close 
Thanks for your suggestion!
 
RELATED WIKI ARTICLES

Related Articles

 
TOP CONTRIBUTORS


In a no-fault system, your car insurance company will pay up to your policy limit for bodily injuries and property damage resulting from an accident, regardless of which party is at-fault. In an at-fault system, also known as a traditional tort liability system, the car insurance company of the at-fault party pays for bodily injuries and property damage to all parties involved in the accident. Provable negligence, or the ability to prove who was responsible for the accident, is used to determine the at-fault party.

Under current no-fault laws, drivers may only sue for damages if the case meets certain predefined thresholds. These thresholds relate to the severity of injury and usually belong to one of two types:

  • Verbal thresholds, which broadly define what (death, dismemberment and/or disfiguration) constitutes a serious injury; or
  • Monetary thresholds, which are expressed in dollar amounts of medical bills.

Since high threshold no-fault systems restrict litigation, they tend to reduce insurance premiums and provide quicker payments against claims.

There are currently 12 states that operate under no-fault laws. Florida, Michigan, New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania have verbal thresholds. Hawaii, Kansas, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Minnesota, North Dakota and Utah use a monetary threshold. In addition, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Kentucky have choice no-fault laws. In these states, policy holders may opt into a no-fault system or choose to retain their right to sue for auto-related injuries.

Wikinvest © 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009. Use of this site is subject to express Terms of Service, Privacy Policy, and Disclaimer. By continuing past this page, you agree to abide by these terms. Any information provided by Wikinvest, including but not limited to company data, competitors, business analysis, market share, sales revenues and other operating metrics, earnings call analysis, conference call transcripts, industry information, or price targets should not be construed as research, trading tips or recommendations, or investment advice and is provided with no warrants as to its accuracy. Stock market data, including US and International equity symbols, stock quotes, share prices, earnings ratios, and other fundamental data is provided by data partners. Stock market quotes delayed at least 15 minutes for NASDAQ, 20 mins for NYSE and AMEX. Market data by Xignite. See data providers for more details. Company names, products, services and branding cited herein may be trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners. The use of trademarks or service marks of another is not a representation that the other is affiliated with, sponsors, is sponsored by, endorses, or is endorsed by Wikinvest.
Powered by MediaWiki