Insurance Eligibility After Land Transfer
| Q: | My farmland is leased. If my lease contract expires and the landowner does not renew it, will my farmer insurance eligibility be terminated? |
| A: |
If your lease contract was signed with a private landowner and the lease has expired without renewal, you no longer meet the requirements for continued enrollment. The Farmer Association handling your insurance coverage must process the termination in accordance with regulations. |
| Q: | I am currently enrolled in the farmer insurance program. Can mu dependents be insured under my coverage? |
| A: |
At present, enrollment is only permitted on a individual basis. There is no provision for dependents to be covered under another person’s policy. Therefore, anyone wishing to join the farmer insurance program must independently meet the relevant eligibility requirements. |
| Q: | Does “self-owned farmland” refer only to land held in my own name? |
| A: |
Farmland owned by you, your spouse, your lineal blood relatives, or your first-degree lineal relatives by marriage all qualify as self-owned farmland and meet the requirements for farmer insurance enrollment. |
| Q: |
Does “self-owned farmland” refer only to land registered under my own name? |
| A: |
Farmland owned by yourself, your spouse, your lineal blood relatives, or your first-degree lineal relatives by marriage all qualify as “self-owned farmland” for Farmers’ Insurance enrollment. |
| Q: |
If I transfer my land ownership to someone else, will it affect my farmer insurance eligibility? |
| A: |
After enrollment, if the transfer, inheritance, partition, or sale of the land results in an insufficient land area to support continued coverage, the insured person will lose eligibility for farmer insurance enrollment. |

