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[D014]
deductible In a policy providing a deductible clause, the amount which must
first be subtracted from the total damage incurred before determining
the insurance company's liability. Of several types used, the
straight deductible establishes the insurer's liability above
the deductible but not below it; the franchise deductible establishes
the insurer's liability for the entire amount of damage once the
deductible amount is exceeded in a loss; and the disappearing
deductible establishes the insurer's liability for an increasing
proportion of the loss, as the total damage rises above the deductible,
until the deductible finally "disappears." Then the
insurer is liable for the entire amount. The deductible may be
in the form of an amount of dollars, a percent of the loss, a
percent of the value of the insured property, or a period of time,
as in health insurance.
(See franchise clause.)
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