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Insurance 101

Posted on Monday, July 13, 2026
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by AMAC, D.J. Wilson
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6 Comments
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Insurance may not be something most people enjoy paying for, but it can be essential protection when life does not go according to plan. At its core, insurance helps transfer the financial risk of certain losses—such as accidents, property damage, injuries, illness, or lawsuits—from an individual to an insurance company. This guide explains the basics: what insurance is, how it works, common types of policies, how to determine what coverage you need, and practical ways to compare policies and manage costs.

What Is Insurance?

Insurance is a contract between you and an insurance company. You pay a fee, called a premium, and in return the insurer agrees to help pay for covered losses described in your policy. Depending on the type of policy, insurance may cover damage to property, medical expenses, injuries, legal liability, or financial support for loved ones after a death.

Who sells insurance?

Insurance is sold by licensed professionals. A captive agent typically represents one insurance company, while an independent agent can compare policies from multiple insurers. Insurance salespeople sometimes get an unfair reputation because policies can be confusing, pricing can vary, and consumers may feel pressured. A good agent should explain coverage clearly, identify gaps, and help you make informed choices without overselling.

What Does Insurance Do?

Insurance helps protect you from large, unexpected costs. It can pay for repairs, medical bills, legal defense, or damages when a covered event occurs. In a sue happy world, liability coverage is especially important because it can help protect you if someone claims you caused injury or property damage. For example, homeowners insurance may respond if a neighbor slips on an icy walkway and sues; auto liability coverage may help if a driver accidentally crashes into a storefront and causes property damage; and a condo policy may help if water from your unit damages another owner’s property and leads to a claim. Ultimately, having insurance prepares people for emergencies and provides peace of mind.

How Insurance Basically Works

Most insurance policies follow the same basic pattern: you choose a policy, pay premiums, and file a claim when a covered loss occurs. The insurer reviews the claim, applies the policy terms, and pays covered amounts up to the policy limits. Your policy may also include deductibles, exclusions, waiting periods, and other conditions that affect what is covered and how much you may receive.

  • Premium: The amount you pay to keep the policy active.
  • Rate: The price used to calculate your premium, based on risk factors and coverage choices.
  • Coverage: The protection provided by the policy.
  • Claim: A formal request for payment after a covered loss.
  • Deductible: The amount you pay out of pocket before insurance pays.
  • Exclusion: A situation, loss, or condition the policy does not cover.
  • Limit: The maximum amount the insurer will pay for a covered loss.
  • Liability: Legal responsibility for injury or damage to another person or property.
  • Endorsement or rider: A change that adds, removes, or modifies coverage.
  • Grace period: Extra time to pay a premium before coverage may lapse.
  • Cancellation: The termination of a policy before the end of its term.
  • Reinstatement: Restoring a policy after it has lapsed or been canceled, if allowed.
  • Surcharge: An additional charge, often due to higher risk or claims history.
  • Underwriting: The insurer’s process for evaluating risk and deciding pricing or eligibility.
  • Waiting period: A required period before certain coverage begins.

How to Decide What Coverage You Need

Choosing coverage can be complex because your needs depend on your assets, income, family situation, health, location, risk tolerance, and legal requirements. Start by identifying what you need to protect, what losses you could afford on your own, and what losses could create serious financial strain. It is also wise to consult a licensed insurance professional who can compare options, explain policy details, and document what each policy includes and excludes.

Basic Types of Insurance

Here are examples of basic types of insurance that most people should consider.

Automobile insurance: Auto insurance protects against costs related to vehicle accidents and damage. Common coverages include liability, collision, comprehensive, medical payments or personal injury protection, and uninsured or underinsured motorist coverage. Liability coverage helps pay for injuries or property damage you cause to others, while collision and comprehensive coverage can help repair or replace your own vehicle after covered events such as crashes, theft, vandalism, fire, weather damage, or glass breakage.

Homeowners insurance: Homeowners insurance helps protect your house, personal belongings, and liability exposure. It may cover losses from events such as fire, theft, vandalism, wind, or certain other perils, depending on the policy. Some risks, such as floods or earthquakes, often require separate coverage. Understand what risks you face and speak to your agent to determine what coverage is right for you.

Renters insurance: Renters insurance protects a tenant’s personal belongings and may include liability coverage and additional living expenses if a covered loss makes the rental unit temporarily unlivable. Unlike homeowners insurance, it generally does not cover the building itself, which is usually the landlord’s responsibility.

Health insurance: Health insurance helps pay for medical care, including preventive services, doctor visits, prescriptions, emergency care, hospital stays, and treatment for illness or injury. Plans vary by premium, deductible, provider network, and cost-sharing. Marketplace plans are commonly grouped into tiers such as bronze, silver, gold, and platinum, which reflect how costs are shared between you and the insurer.

Life insurance: Life insurance can provide financial support to beneficiaries after the insured person dies. It may be useful if others depend on your income, if you want to help cover debts or final expenses, or if you want to provide long-term financial protection for family members.

Long-term disability insurance: Long-term disability insurance can replace part of your income if an illness or injury prevents you from working for an extended period. It is especially important for people who rely on their paycheck to cover living expenses and support dependents.

Umbrella Insurance

Umbrella insurance provides extra liability protection above the limits of policies such as auto, homeowners, or renters insurance. It may be worth considering if you have significant assets, higher-than-average liability risk, teen drivers, rental property, or activities that increase the chance of being sued.

Why Insurance Rates Vary

Insurance rates vary because insurers’ price policies are based on risk. Factors may include where you live, the value of what you are insuring, your claims history, driving record, credit-based insurance score where permitted, coverage limits, deductibles, and broader economic conditions such as repair costs, medical costs, labor shortages, severe weather, and inflation. Insurers evaluate these factors differently, often using their own pricing models to estimate risk and set rates.

How to Find a Better-Priced Policy

  • Compare quotes from more than one insurer.
  • Ask about discounts for bundling policies, maintaining a safe driving record, completing driver education, installing protective devices, or paying electronically.
  • Review deductibles and coverage limits carefully; a lower premium may mean higher out-of-pocket costs later.
  • Update your policy when your circumstances change, such as moving, buying a new car, renovating a home, or adding a driver.
  • Re-shop periodically, but make sure you compare similar coverage, not just the lowest price.

Note: AMAC partners with reliable insurers to offer its eligible members discounts. Be sure to check out your member benefits, get quotes, and shop around for the best coverage, service and monetary value.

Why paying your premium matters

If you want coverage, paying your insurance premium is non-negotiable. If you miss premium payments, your insurer may cancel the policy after any applicable grace period. Generally, you will be notified that your payment is overdue before this occurs. A lapse in coverage is serious. It can leave you responsible for losses, make it harder or more expensive to get new coverage, and may create legal problems if the insurance is required, such as auto insurance. Getting behind in payments can also affect future rates.

Why paying your premium matters

Insurance is essential because it helps protect people from major financial setbacks when unexpected events occur, such as accidents, property damage, illness, injuries, lawsuits, or death. This article explains the basics of insurance, including how policies work, why coverage matters, common types of insurance, how to choose appropriate protection, why rates vary, and how to compare options while managing costs. Understanding these basics can help you make informed choices and select coverage that fits your personal situation. For more information on AMAC insurances, visit our benefits page!

Disclosure: This article is for informational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional advice and does not endorse any specific product or service. For guidance about your individual situation, consult a qualified professional.

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Michael J
Michael J
16 hours ago

Insurance or the lack of it is something that puts fear into the holder who is afraid of someone or something taking their stuff because of a mishap or accident. It also provides a “peace of mind feeling for something that might or might not happen. Insurance companies use actuary statistics to determine their risk and what to charge based on probability. It’s a ponzi scheme for those masses who pay their premiums and don’t file claims so insurance companies can pay out in comparison the miniscule percentage of claims for people that do. Insurance companies look at everything, they have to, this includes how often a client makes a claim even if they’re unlucky in life. The very fear of having a premium increase or being dropped as a result of an incident is a powerful deterant not to file and insurance companies know that. It’s the only business that has no inventory and can raise their rates just because. My insurance premiums has doubled in cost, but the fact remains, “do you feel lucky?”
The scariest thing about having insurance is hearing “your not covered” even though you been faithfully paying your premiums. Insurance is a necessary evil.

Robert Mallory
Robert Mallory
13 hours ago

Deductibles should not exist. We already pay for the insurance to take care of a situation we don’t have money for, and if you don’t have the money for it then everything you’ve paid into the insurance is wasted. Talk about an insurance racket!

Chris
Chris
13 hours ago

Somewhat off in your opening statement. While it’s true that technically the risk goes from the individual to the insurance company, the *costs* of claims are shared between the company’s customers through the premiums. It’s a non-governmental way of socializing risks. The only real risks to the company are 1) they misjudge the risks, undercharge for premiums and can’t pay all legit claims and go bankrupt, 2) they get too many high risk customers and have to charge too high of premiums to cover their payouts — and go out of business or exit the market as customers switch to other companies.

In the end, both of those scenarios are risks to the customers — they’ve paid the premiums and wind up without useable coverage. Chose your insurance carriers carefully. The carrier with the lowest premium might not be the wisest choice.

Companies that charge too little for their premiums are probably more reticent to pay claims, keep that in mind too. There aren’t that many ways for an insurance company to keep their premiums low — either limit the claims they pay, or limit the customers they will insure to low-risk people (so they’re more likely to refuse to renew you if you do have a claim).

Roy
Roy
10 hours ago

Insurance is a rip off. I maintain my house, live in a low risk area, maintain my vechiles, drive defensably and dont have claims but every year my insurance goes up. 50 years no claims on anything but the prems go up.
That is a screw job. Doesnt matter what company. People who crash there cars let there homez go to ruin while they play every weekend pay the same.
Sick of stupid insurance companies.

Rosie Haley
Rosie Haley
5 hours ago

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