Maine Insurance
Auto Insurance
Here are a few definitions to help you better understand what you're looking for:
Bodily injury pays for injury or death you cause others when you are at fault in an accident.
Property damage pays to repair damage you cause to their car or property.
Medical payments coverage insures you, or someone driving your car, against death or injury.
According to state law, your car insurance policy must consist of the following coverage:
- $50,000 bodily injury per person
- $100,000 bodily injury per accident
- $25,000 property damage
- $1,000 medical payments
Health Insurance
Health insurance rates in your state may be based on any or all of the following:
- Age
- The industry you work in
- Your geographic area
- Whether or not you drink or smoke
But you don’t have to spend a lot of money to get insured. You can help keep costs low by:
- Becoming educated about the real costs of medical services and the best ways to stay healthy
- Using generic or less expensive drugs whenever possible
- Using your health plan's nurse hotline whenever possible before seeking medical attention elsewhere
- Talking to healthcare providers about their costs and use of newest technologies, which drive costs up
- Refraining from smoking or drinking, and living an overall healthier lifestyle
Home Insurance
A broad HO-2 policy is an extended version of HO-1. It protects your home from the same perils listed under an HO-1 policy, plus damage from structure collapse, falling objects and water discharge from home appliances.
A special HO-3 policy is the most common form of home insurance because it protects your home and its contents from "all" perils, with the exception of floods and earthquakes.
All three types of policies also protect you from legal responsibility if someone is injured on your property.
Life Insurance
- Term insurance: the simplest form. You purchase coverage for a specific period and, if you die during that time, your beneficiary receives the policy's value. Includes NO investment component.
- Whole life insurance: a policy purchased to cover you for your whole life, not just a set period of time. Premiums remain level while the policy is in effect, and the insurer invests a portion of your premiums, building the policy's value over time.
- Universal life insurance: used to accumulate investment. You pay a minimum premium PLUS an amount you would like invested. The insurer chooses the investment vehicle, usually only bonds and mortgages, and both your investment and its returns are placed into a cash-value account. This account may then be used to pay future premiums, or it may continue to build.
- Variable life insurance: similar to universal life insurance, but includes a broader selection of investment products, including stocks. Beneficiaries receive the policy's face value, OR that amount PLUS the value of your investment account.
There are five ways to ensure you get the best rates on life insurance, along with the best coverage:
Review your policy and reapply for lower rates when there are changes in your health.



