Insurance Glossary
Plain-language definitions of common insurance terms.
Glossary of insurance terms
A
- Assured
- A term often used interchangeably with "insured," especially in life and marine insurance, referring to the person whose life, health, or property is protected by the policy.
- Example: In life assurance, the assured is the person whose life is insured.
B
- Beneficiary
- The person or entity entitled to receive the benefits or proceeds of a life insurance policy upon the death of the assured or when the policy matures.
- Example: A father may name his wife as the beneficiary of his life policy.
- Benefit
- The payment, service, or advantage provided by an insurer to the insured or beneficiary under the terms of an insurance policy, usually when a covered event occurs.
- Example: The death benefit in a life policy is the amount paid to the beneficiary when the insured dies.
- Broker
- An independent insurance intermediary who represents the interests of the insured (client) and helps them find suitable cover from insurers, often providing professional advice and claim support.
- Example: A company may engage an insurance broker to obtain the best terms for its industrial all-risk policy.
C
- Compensation
- The payment or financial restitution made by an insurer to the insured (or third party) for loss, damage, injury, or death covered by the policy.
- Example: After a covered motor accident, the insurer pays compensation to the injured third party.
D
- Deductible
- A concept similar to excess, referring to the amount subtracted from a claim before payment is made. Often used in U.S. practice.
- Example: A deductible of GH₵500 on a GH₵2,000 claim means the insurer pays GH₵1,500.
E
- Excess
- The portion of a claim that the insured must pay before the insurer pays the remaining amount.
- Example: If excess is GH₵1,000 and the loss is GH₵5,000, the insurer pays GH₵4,000.
- Exclusion
- A policy provision that removes certain risks, events, or losses from coverage.
- Example: A fire policy may exclude loss caused by war or nuclear radiation.
I
- Indemnity
- The principle of restoring the insured to the same financial position held before a loss occurred.
- Example: If your insured car worth GH₵10,000 is damaged, compensation equals the loss value, not profit.
- Insurable Interest
- The legal right to insure due to a financial or emotional relationship with the subject of insurance.
- Example: A person has insurable interest in their life, spouse, or property; a creditor has insurable interest in a debtor's life.
- Insured
- The person or entity covered by an insurance policy and entitled to compensation for covered losses.
- Example: In a health policy, the insured is the individual whose medical expenses are covered.
L
- Liability
- The legal responsibility to compensate another for injury or damage caused.
- Example: A driver may be liable for injuries to a pedestrian.
- Life Insurance
- A contract where an insurer pays a specified amount to a beneficiary upon death or after a set period.
- Example: Under a 20-year policy, if death occurs within the term, payment is made to the family.
N
- NCD (No Claims Discount / Bonus)
- A premium discount for policyholders who have not made claims during a policy period.
- Example: A 3-year claim-free record may earn a 30% discount.
P
- Partial Withdrawal
- A withdrawal from a life policy's accumulated value without terminating the policy.
- Example: The insured withdraws funds for emergency needs while keeping coverage.
- Perils
- Specific risks or causes of loss covered by an insurance policy.
- Example: Fire, theft, flood, lightning, and explosion.
- Policy Period (Policy Term)
- The duration for which a policy provides coverage.
- Example: 1 January 2025 – 31 December 2025 is a one-year policy.
- Policy Suspension
- Temporary halt of coverage due to conditions like unpaid premiums.
- Example: Coverage resumes after payment is made.
- Policy Termination
- Ending of an insurance contract due to expiration, cancellation, or other factors.
- Example: A motor policy ends after one year unless renewed.
- Premium
- The amount paid by the insured for insurance coverage.
- Example: GH₵500 annually for a motor policy.
- Proposal Form
- A document completed by an applicant when applying for insurance, used by the insurer to assess risk.
- Example: A motor insurance applicant provides vehicle and driver details on the proposal form.
- Proximate Cause
- The main or dominant cause that directly leads to a loss.
- Example: If an earthquake causes a fire, the earthquake is the proximate cause.
R
- Reinstatement
- Restoring a lapsed or suspended policy to active status after meeting conditions.
- Example: Paying arrears within 6 months restores coverage.
- Repudiation
- Refusal by an insurer to pay a claim due to a breach of policy conditions or invalidity of the claim.
- Example: Providing false information on a proposal form can lead to claim repudiation.
S
- Settlement
- The final payment or resolution of a claim by the insurer.
- Example: An insurer pays GH₵15,000 for vehicle repairs as full and final settlement.
- Statute Bar (Statute of Limitation)
- The legal time limit within which a claim must be filed.
- Example: Claims filed after 3 years may be statute-barred and no longer valid.
- Sum Assured
- The guaranteed amount payable under a life insurance policy.
- Example: A GH₵200,000 endowment policy pays the sum assured at death or maturity.
- Sum Insured
- The maximum amount payable under a non-life insurance policy.
- Example: A building insured for GH₵1 million has that as its sum insured.
- Surrender
- Voluntarily ending a life policy early in exchange for its accumulated cash value.
- Example: Surrendering a policy after 10 years may yield GH₵15,000 in cash value.
U
- Utmost Good Faith (Uberrimae Fidei)
- A core principle of insurance requiring full and honest disclosure of all material facts by both the insured and the insurer.
- Example: Failure to disclose a pre-existing illness when applying for health cover may void a policy.
W
- Warranty
- A condition in an insurance policy that must be strictly observed by the insured. Breach may void a claim.
- Example: A warranty to install fire extinguishers means failure to do so may void a fire claim.
