If you have a health insurance policy (Medical Insurance) it will pick up where your auto coverage left off.
Medical bills for yourself and anyone else in your car in case of an accident
Medical bills for yourself and anyone else in your car in case of an accident
Medical bills for yourself and anyone else in the car in the case of an accident- apex
The at fault drivers auto insurance policy would pay for medical bills up to the policy limits for which that insured driver is liable. If there is no insurance then there is no coverage. If no one has Auto Insurance to cover you, hopefully you have a major Medical Insurance Policy in place. Major medical will cover your medical expenses even from a car accident.
== == If no other vehicles were involved in this accident, the insurance company of the motorcycle driver has to cover the medical bills of the passenger who was injured.
If you have medical payments in your insurance. Liability only does not pay medical benefits. And the medical bills have to be the result of an auto accident.
In many states, "no-fault" coverage means that YOUR OWN policy pays the medical bills, loss of income, and related services for injuries sustained in an automobile accident. This means that, regardless of who was at fault, YOUR OWN policy pays for your injuries. If one of the parties decides to litigate because of injuries, those damages would be covered under the Bodily Injury Liability portion of the policy.
If the child is over age 18, then the parent is not responsible for the child's medical bills. The child is legally responsible for anything that the insurance policy did not pay.
the 'at fault' party's insurance would be liable for the pain and suffering, the policy of the vehicle you are in if they have med pay (or manditory p.i.p in some states) will cover med bills as well....
The insurers of the driver who was deemed to be at fault for the accident.
Possibly if they are auto accident related. Also, if you have Med Pay on your own insurance.. any other bills that may not cover on the at-fault drivers' insurance, can fall back on yours but your rate won't increase if you're found not at fault.
Yes, every liability policy has bodily insurance coverage attached to it. Therefore, their insurance should pay any medical bills you may be charged for.