Declarations, Insuring Agreement, Conditions, and Exclusions

An insurance policy is not merely a static piece of paper; it is a legally binding mechanism—a highly specialized engine designed to transfer risk from an individual to an institution. When you, as a producer, deliver a policy to a client, you are not handing them a generic receipt. You are handing them a complex contract composed of four universally standard interlocking parts. To master property and casualty insurance, you must first master the architecture of this contract.

Written contracts have formalized economic agreements for millennia. A modern insurance policy is simply a highly specialized contract designed to legally transfer risk.
Written contracts have formalized economic agreements for millennia. A modern insurance policy is simply a highly specialized contract designed to legally transfer risk.

This architectural framework is known by the acronym DICE, which stands for Declarations, Insuring Agreement, Conditions, and Exclusions. DICE represents the four fundamental parts found in nearly all property and casualty insurance policies. By dissecting these four components, we can understand exactly how an insurance company assesses a risk, promises to cover it, establishes the rules of the relationship, and draws the boundary lines around what it absolutely will not pay for.

Let us dismantle the engine and examine each part.

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