No fault is your PIP on your auto policy. You would have to have been injured in or getting in or out of a vehicle (in an accident or closing the door on your hand, things like that) The bills have to be submitted to the company for them to pay. I doubt that your pharmacy will just "bill" the auto insurance for the prescription (for one thing they have no way of knowing what the prescription is for or whether it is accident related). You will either need to have them submit it to your health insurance & let your health insurance bill the auto insurance OR, you will just have to pay for the prescription, get a receipt & submit it to your auto insurance for reimbursement.
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No fault is your PIP on your auto policy. You would have to have been injured in or getting in or out of a vehicle (in an accident or closing the door on your hand, things like that) The bills have to be submitted to the company for them to pay. I doubt that your pharmacy will just "bill" the auto insurance for the prescription (for one thing they have no way of knowing what the prescription is for or whether it is accident related). You will either need to have them submit it to your health insurance & let your health insurance bill the auto insurance OR, you will just have to pay for the prescription, get a receipt & submit it to your auto insurance for reimbursement.
???? None of them take auto insurance! What you do, is you pay for the prescription, then submit the receipt to the claims adjuster for reimbursement.
Which "pharmacies"?