Insurance Fraud

Insurance Fraud

Insurance fraud is an illegal act on the part of either the buyer or seller of an insurance contract. 3. **Asset diversion**: The theft of insurance company assets, such as, for example, using borrowed funds to buy an insurance company and then using the acquired company's assets to pay off the debt. Insurance fraud with automobiles, for instance, may include disposing of a vehicle and then claiming it was stolen in order to receive a settlement payment or a replacement vehicle. If the vehicle owner lives in an area with high rate premiums because of recurring car theft in the neighborhood or other reasons, the owner might try to register the vehicle in a different area to lower their premiums. Buyer fraud, meanwhile, can consist of exaggerated claims, falsified medical history, post-dated policies, viatical fraud, faked death or kidnapping, and murder.

Insurance fraud involves any misuse of insurance policies or applications in order to illegally gain or benefit.

What Is Insurance Fraud?

Insurance fraud is an illegal act on the part of either the buyer or seller of an insurance contract. Insurance fraud from the issuer includes selling policies from non-existent companies, failing to submit premiums, and churning policies to create more commissions. Buyer fraud, meanwhile, can consist of exaggerated claims, falsified medical history, post-dated policies, viatical fraud, faked death or kidnapping, and murder.

Insurance fraud involves any misuse of insurance policies or applications in order to illegally gain or benefit.
Insurance fraud is usually an attempt to exploit an insurance contract for financial gain.
The majority of insurance fraud cases involve exaggerated or false claims.

How Insurance Fraud Works

Insurance fraud is an attempt to exploit an insurance contract. Insurance is meant to protect against risks, not serve as a vehicle to enrich the insured.

Insurance fraud by the policy issuer does occur, although the majority of cases have to do with the policyholder attempting to receive more money by exaggerating a claim. More sensational instances, such as faking a death or committing murder for the insurance money, are comparatively rare.

One of the downsides of insurance fraud is that the heightened cost of dealing with such problems is passed along by insurers to their customers in the form of higher premiums.

$40 billion

The amount of money lost each year to non-health insurance fraud, according to the FBI.

Types of Insurance Fraud Schemes

Sellers

Three fraudulent schemes that occur on the seller side, according to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), are:

  1. Premium diversion: An example of premium diversion is when a business or individual sells insurance without a license and then does not pay claims.
  2. Fee churning: When intermediaries such as reinsurers are involved. Each takes a commission that dilutes the initial premium so that there is no longer any money left to pay for claims.
  3. Asset diversion: The theft of insurance company assets, such as, for example, using borrowed funds to buy an insurance company and then using the acquired company's assets to pay off the debt.

Attempts to illegally reap funds from insurance policies by buyers can take on a variety of forms and methods. Insurance fraud with automobiles, for instance, may include disposing of a vehicle and then claiming it was stolen in order to receive a settlement payment or a replacement vehicle.

The original vehicle could be secretly sold to a third party, abandoned in a remote location, intentionally destroyed by fire, or pushed into a river or lake. If the owner sells the vehicle, they would seek to profit by pocketing the cash, and then claim the vehicle was stolen in order to receive further compensation.

Both buyers and sellers of insurance can, and do, commit fraud.

Example of Insurance Fraud

The owner of a vehicle might attempt to cut the costs of insurance premiums by using a false registration. If the vehicle owner lives in an area with high rate premiums because of recurring car theft in the neighborhood or other reasons, the owner might try to register the vehicle in a different area to lower their premiums.

Repair work on a vehicle could also become a source of insurance fraud. For example, a repair shop that is expecting payment from the insurer might charge for extensive work but then use cheap or even fake replacements. They might also overcharge the insurer by overstating the extent of the repairs needed.

Related terms:

Asset

An asset is a resource with economic value that an individual or corporation owns or controls with the expectation that it will provide a future benefit. read more

Boiler Room

A boiler room is an operation that features high-pressure salespeople peddling speculative securities. Read how to spot and avoid boiler room scams.  read more

Commission

A commission, in financial services, is the money charged by an investment advisor for giving advice and making transactions for a client. read more

Corner

To corner in an investing context is to gain control over a business, stock, or commodity to the point where it is possible to manipulate the price. read more

Death Bond

A death bond is an asset-backed security derived by pooling life insurance policies, which are then repackaged into bonds and sold to investors. read more

Fake Claims

The term fake claims refers to insurance claims that are made fraudulently.  read more

Fraud

Fraud, in a general sense, is purposeful deceit designed to provide the perpetrator with unlawful gain or to deny a right to a victim. read more

Insurance

Insurance is a contract (policy) in which an insurer indemnifies another against losses from specific contingencies and/or perils. read more

Insurance Claim

An insurance claim is a formal request by a policyholder to an insurance company for coverage or compensation for a covered loss or policy event. The insurance company validates the claim and, once approved, issues payment to the insured. read more

Premium

Premium is the total cost of an option or the difference between the higher price paid for a fixed-income security and the security's face amount at issue. read more