An insurance policy that covers only one specific type of risk (insurance risk). Examples of a monoline policy include life insurance, auto insurance, liability insurance, etc. Certain brokers and agents may consider clients in need of only one type of insurance policy as a monoline client.
Monoline or monoline policy is opposite to a package policy (bundled insurance) that consists of a number of different coverage types, such as property insurance and liability insurance in the same policy. A package policy is usually less costlier than insurance coverage acquired separately or stand-alone.
For example, if a client seeks to acquire a package policy, but the underwriter does not sell liability insurance – the client would need to purchase a monoline products liability policy.
A monoline policy is also called a stand-alone insurance policy.
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