Insurance Companies Are Denying More Claims Than Ever—Here's Why (Ep. 255)
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Insurance premiums keep rising—but claims are getting denied. So the big question is: does self-insuring actually make sense, or is it a risky move most people misunderstand?
In WTB Episode 255, we dive into one of the most controversial chapters of Becoming Your Own Banker: expanding the system and self-insuring. We unpack Nelson Nash's ideas around premiums matching income, infinite banking, and when (or if) it makes sense to self-insure things like automobiles and homes.
This episode also tackles the real-world problems people are facing today—denied insurance claims, skyrocketing repair costs, inflation, and misunderstood coverage. We break down the theory and the reality so you can decide what's right for your situation.
Key Takeaways:
Why insurance companies are denying more claims than ever
What Nelson Nash really meant by "self-insuring."
The difference between comp & collision vs liability coverage
How infinite banking creates a closed-loop financial system
Why self-insuring works for some—but not everyone
The importance of documentation for homeowners' insurance claims
Chapters:
(00:00) – Insurance claims denied & rising premiums
(01:11) – The infinite banking paradigm explained
(02:15) – Becoming your own banker (closed-loop system)
(03:38) – Capitalization & financing cars through policies
(03:56) – Self-insuring autos & homes: real-world risks
(06:01) – Personal property insurance & documentation pitfalls
(09:34) – When self-insuring makes sense (and when it doesn't)