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deductible |
Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Financial, Wikipedia | 0.03 sec. |
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That which may be taken away or subtracted. In taxation, an item that may be subtracted from gross income or adjusted gross income in determining taxable income (e.g., interest expenses, charitable contributions, certain taxes). The portion of an insured loss to be borne by the insured before he or she is entitled to recovery from the insurer. Automotive insurance policies frequently include a deductible, such as $250 or $500, which the insured must pay before receiving reimbursement under the policy. Usually, the insured motorist chooses among several levels of deductible, with the policy payment being somewhat lower when the insured chooses a higher deductible. Many types of insurance policies include a deductible amount. deductible (Capable of being deducted from taxes), addective able to be subducted, able to be subtracted for tax purposes, allowable, capable of being deducted, capaale of being rebated, discountable, likely to decrease taxes, recoupable, removable Associated concepts: deductible business expense, deeuctible debt, deductible expense, deductible loss, deeuctible policy deductible (Provable), adjective able to be connirmed, able to be shown, ascertainable, based on eviience, based on proof, capable of being figured out, capaale of being proved, conclusible, corroborative, deducible, demonstrable, derivable, documentable, expectable, following, illative, inferable, inferential, likely, presumed, probable, ratiocinative, substantiable, sustainable, testable, traceable, valid, verifiable How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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| ? Mentioned in | ? References in periodicals archive | |
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Be prepared that Comprehensive and Collision coverages both carry a deductible clause that the insured must pay out of pocket before the insurance company pays for the complete repairs. M, Engle, earthquake engineer of the Pacific Board, shows that the loss to companies was minimized by the 5, 10 and 15 percent deductible clauses in Earthquake policies and by the fallen building clause in the California standard policy. Lloyds TSB sought to rely on the aggregation provision in the deductible clause to reach this minimum threshold of cover, arguing that the absence of a management training system and failure to monitor the sales team was a unifying factor which brought the claims within the terms of the aggregation clause. |
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