Automobile Insurance
Information Page
Chances are you're
spending hundreds, maybe thousands of dollars on auto
insurance every year. When you stop to consider what
a sizable part of your budget is spent on auto insurance, it
makes sense to spend some time learning the basics. While not
a detailed explanation of your auto insurance coverages, this
guide is designed to help you make informed coverage decisions.
Please check your policy for details of the coverages you have.
What if, while driving
your car, you caused an accident which resulted in extensive
property damage and serious injuries to yourself and others:
do you know for certain that your auto insurance coverage would
pay for most medical expenses, repair bills, lawsuits and court
costs? Having the right coverage and limits can eliminate or
substantially reduce the risk of losing your life savings.
In the final analysis,
you owe it to yourself and your loved ones to know enough about
auto insurance to select the best company and coverages for
you.
Liability
Coverages
Liability coverages
are among the most important in relation to your financial security.
In the face of ever
increasing medical costs, the possibility of a multiple car
accident, or damage to expensive property, the minimum coverage
limits required by law may not be enough. Choosing low liability
limits could be an unwise way to save on insurance.
Bodily Injury
Liability
This coverage, combined with property damage liability
coverage, is the foundation of any auto insurance policy
and is required in most states. If bodily injury claims or lawsuits
are brought against you and if an investigation or a court finds
you to be legally responsible for injuries to persons, your
bodily injury liability insurance will pay, up to your policy
limit, for injuries to other people - such as pedestrians, passengers
in your car, or people in other vehicles. Also, bodily injury
liability coverage provides for your legal defense against those
bodily injury claims or lawsuits, should it become necessary.
Although it varies
by state, bodily injury coverage does not generally pay for
your own injuries or to your spouse or other family members,
especially when they are not in your covered vehicle. Injuries
to you, your spouse, and other family members in your vehicle
can be protected more completely by medical payments coverage.
There are different
limits of bodily injury liability coverage. Different limits
of coverage are offered to accommodate various levels of protection.
If you are found to be responsible for a serious accident with
injuries to several people, in your car or in other cars, or
if there is even one serious injury or death, your state's minimum
insurance may not cover you adequately. An objective in selecting
limits of any liability coverage should be to purchase coverage
equal to the net asset value that you have available and could
reasonably lose in the event of causing damages to others. It
is a good idea to consider and purchase higher limits than what
your state requires.
Property
Damage Liability
This coverage, combined
with bodily injury liability coverage, is the foundation of
any auto insurance policy and is required in most states. If
property damage claims or lawsuits are brought against you and
if an investigation or a court finds you to be legally responsible
for damages to property, your property damage liability insurance
will pay, up to your policy limit, for repair or replacement
of things like someone else's car, light posts, or even buildings.
Also, property damage liability coverage provides for your legal
defense against those property damage claims or lawsuits, should
it become necessary. Property damage coverage does not pay for
the damage to your own property, damages to your property are
covered under the optional collision and comprehensive coverages.
There are different
limits of property damage liability insurance. Different limits
of coverage are offered to accommodate various levels of protection.
If you are found to be responsible for a serious accident with
damages to several vehicles, or even one expensive vehicle,
your state's minimum insurance may not cover you adequately.
An objective in selecting limits of any liability coverage should
be to purchase coverage equal to the net asset value that you
have available and could reasonably lose in the event of causing
damages to others. It is a good idea to consider and purchase
higher limits than what your state requires.
Each state's Financial
Responsibility Law requires minimum property damage liability
limits.
Medical Payments
This optional coverage
pays, up to the policy limit per person, for medical expenses
regardless of fault for you and the occupants of your covered
vehicle who are injured in an automobile accident. It also protects
you and the relatives living in your household if they are injured
in someone else's car, or by a car as pedestrians. All reasonable
and necessary medical expenses are covered within the period
of time specified in your policy. This coverage is valuable
if you do not have health insurance, because payment will be
made while the liability is being determined.
Excess Medical
Payments Coverage
This optional coverage is different from medical payments coverage
in that it covers only those reasonable and necessary medical
expenses, up to the policy limit, which are not covered by another
source, such as health insurance or another person's auto insurance
(except Medicare). This coverage pays up to the policy limit
per person for medical expenses as outlined above, regardless
of fault, if you or the occupants of your covered vehicle are
injured. This coverage also protects you and the relatives living
in your household if injured in someone else's car, or by a
car as pedestrians under the same coverage conditions.
This coverage is
designed to complement your health insurance as most medical
insurance policies carry co-insurance and/or deductible provisions
and is less expensive than standard medical payments coverage.
Coverage
For Your Car
Comprehensive
Coverage:
This optional coverage applies if your car is damaged by fire,
theft, vandalism, glass
breakage, windstorm or even contact with an animal.
The coverage provides to repair your car, or pay the actual
cash value if the car is deemed to be a total loss, less your
deductible. Comprehensive coverage does not cover wear and tear,
engine failure, or other mechanical difficulties. When you are
financing your car, comprehensive coverage may be required by
the lienholder.
Collision
Coverage:
This optional coverage provides the payment to fix your car,
or pay the actual cash value if the car is deemed to be a total
loss, if it is overturned or damaged in a collision
with another car or object. This coverage would pay for damages
to your covered vehicle regardless of who is at fault, but this
coverage is subject to a deductible. As with comprehensive coverage,
if you are financing your car the lienholder may require collision
coverage.
Rental Reimbursement
Coverage:
This optional coverage is invaluable if you have a covered loss
and you do not have another car to use while yours is being
repaired. This coverage is available for purchase if you carry
collision or comprehensive coverages on the vehicle. We will
reimburse you, up to the policy limit, for rental car expenses
incurred when the covered vehicle is not driveable or is in
the shop for repairs during a reasonable period due to a covered
loss. The policy limits are a per day dollar limit up to a total
dollar limit per accident. Several limit combinations are available
for many types of vehicles.
Uninsured
Motorist Coverage
Suppose you are injured
in an accident caused by an uninsured motorist? Or, what if
you are injured by a hit-and-run driver?
This coverage is
commonly referred to as UM coverage. This coverage is important
and is required in many states because even in mandatory insurance
states there are still vehicles without insurance coverage in
force at some time during the year. This coverage pays for injuries,
up to the coverage limit, caused by a driver who is uninsured,
or an unidentified hit-and-run driver, who is legally liable
for those injuries. This coverage also protects relatives who
live with you, the occupants of your insured car, and while
you are a pedestrian.
Please note that
uninsured motorist coverage does not pay for damage to your
car which was caused by an uninsured motorist. Damage to your
car would be covered under collision coverage or uninsured motorist
property damage coverage if it is allowed in your state and
you carry it on your vehicle.
The coverages and
limits vary by state
Underinsured
Motorist Coverage
What if you are injured
and the coverage limits of the person at fault are not enough
to pay your medical bills?
This coverage is
commonly referred to as UIM coverage. This coverage will apply
if another driver, who is legally responsible for an accident
which injures you, is required to pay more than their bodily
injury liability coverage limits. This coverage will pay up
to the coverage limit, but only after all of the liable person's
coverage limits have been exhausted. This coverage also protects
relatives who live with you, and as a pedestrian.
The coverages and
limits vary by state |