Gig workers mis-sold insurance endorsements that exclude their delivery platform
Insurance agents sell rideshare endorsements to gig workers without disclosing that the policy excludes specific delivery platforms like DoorDash. Workers pay full premiums for coverage that does not apply to their actual work, and refunds on early termination are a fraction of amounts paid. There is no verification step at point-of-sale to match endorsement scope to the worker's actual platform.
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Similar Problems
surfaced semanticallyAllstate Retains Most of Prepaid Premium After Policy Cancellation
Allstate customers canceling prepaid policies receive only a small fraction of their premium back, with the insurer citing six-month policy terms that were not clearly disclosed at purchase. The opaque refund calculation leaves customers unable to predict financial exposure from cancellation. Insurance policy fee transparency tools address a structural consumer harm.
Allstate charges after cancellation and withholds full refund
A policyholder was charged after cancelling their auto insurance and received only a partial refund weeks later, with no compensation for the resulting overdraft fee. Representatives failed to follow through on promised callbacks. Insurance billing systems leave customers with no recourse when charges occur post-cancellation.
Insurance Agents Misrepresenting Coverage and Failing to Apply Promised Discounts
Customers who rely on agent-provided policy setup discover that promised discounts were never applied and stated coverage items like roadside assistance were fabricated. Systematic billing errors persist across multiple months despite complaints. Customers have no mechanism to verify agent commitments before coverage gaps become apparent.
Allstate Charges Full Annual Premium After Cancellation and Withholds Refund
Allstate processed a full annual premium charge after receiving a written cancellation request, then refused to return funds for 7-10 days and suggested the customer dispute the charge with their bank. This billing practice during policy cancellation creates financial harm and places burden on the customer to recover their own money. It reflects a structural issue in insurance cancellation processing.
Insurance companies collect premiums but fail to activate purchased policies
Customers pay hundreds of dollars for auto insurance only to discover the policy was never activated, leaving them uninsured without notification. This billing-without-coverage failure exposes customers to legal and financial risk. The gap between payment processing and policy activation creates a dangerous accountability void.
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