Skip Ribbon Commands
Skip to main content
Are You Covered?
  • Care to Share? How Joining a Car or Bike Share Program Could Impact Your Insurance
    Across the country car and bike share programs are gaining in popularity as a way to ease congested traffic patterns in urban areas while at the same time providing more flexible transportation alternatives to public transit. These programs are a great alternative for urban dwellers and college students who may not own a car or bike but occasionally need one to run errands, or to use as an alternate means of commuting. But how does your insurance work with these types of bike and car share programs?
  • Do Individuals Need to Buy UM Coverage?
    Uninsured or underinsured motorist coverage (referred to as UM or UIM, respectively), is a unique form of auto insurance in that it gives drivers an added opportunity to protect themselves from “out there”—specifically, all those people driving with little or no auto liability insurance.
  • Rental Car Insurance:  To Buy or Not to Buy?
    As the holiday season approaches, millions of Americans will take to the roads to visit family and friends. Since many will make the trip in a rented car, it’s an appropriate time to discuss one of the most frequently asked questions of agents and brokers all over the country: “Should I buy the insurance from the rental car company?”
  • Transporting Kids to School Events
    As early as they start school, children become involved in extra-curricular activities. Adults charged with getting groups of kids from home or school to the ball field and back home again are usually more concerned with maintaining their sanity than auto insurance. However, hauling kids around could have a serious affect on your coverage.
  • Insurance: The One Question Everyone Asks
    “Am I overpaying?”

    That’s a question that every consumer asks from time to time. Everyone is curious and concerned as to whether he or she is getting a good value for the money, whether it’s for a candy bar, a car or an airline ticket.
  • Family Members: What You Auto Know
    Those that design personal auto insurance policies learned years ago that folks living in the same house will take turns driving the family cars. That’s why auto insurance policies are designed to provide coverage not just for the person specifically named on the policy (you) but also your spouse and family members.
  • Understanding Driver Exclusions
    Everyone knows “that guy” whom you wouldn’t trust behind the wheel of your car, even in a matter of life and death. For the truly unfortunate, “that guy” is a member of your household—and looks not only to your vehicles as a source of transportation but also to your auto insurance as a source for coverage.
  • Auto Insurance Goes to the Dogs
    Many auto insurers are now offering more than collision and liability coverage for motorists – they’re also providing protection for their furry friends, too.
  • Business Use of My Personal Vehicle: Will My Insurance Work?
    Running errands, making deliveries, visiting customers. Even for those whose employment is not based on driving, it’s fair to say that your vehicle is an essential part of your employment. This presents an important question: If you are involved in an accident in the course of employment, are you covered by your personal auto insurance policy (PAP)?

  • Back-to-School Driving Tips for Student and Parents
    School is back in session and many high school and college students will be driving more as they commute to and from school, which makes now a good time to remind your student driver about safe driving practices.
  • Is insurance for an old car necessary?
    Should the age or value of your car make any difference to the cost of your auto insurance? For some insurance coverages, the answer is no.
  • Shopping Carts Woes
    Could your car’s worst enemy be…a shopping cart? How could a motor-less, four-wheeled wannabe pose such a threat to a proper automobile? Believe it or not, one of the most common causes of body damage to a car is the dings and dents received by not-so-innocent buggies in the parking lots of your neighborhood grocery store. The question is: If your car is the next victim, how will your car insurance respond?
Is insurance for an old car necessary?

Should the age or value of your car make any difference to the cost of your auto insurance? For some insurance coverages, the answer is no.

Take liability coverages, for instance. These are the limits that protect you when you injure someone or someone else’s property with your car and are being held liable for the damages. It doesn’t matter whether you run over someone with an old clunker or a new SUV. And you will need liability insurance to cover your legal costs and pay the damages if you are found responsible.

Medical coverages? Uninsured or underinsured motorist coverage? Again, it does not matter if you or your passengers are injured in a 1979 Dodge or a 2002 Mercedes. These coverages are still necessary.

The only coverages you should consider altering simply due to the age or value of your vehicle are the ones that will actually pay for damages or loss of your car. For example, if your car is stolen and never recovered, your insurance carrier owes you the actual value of your car less any deductible. If your car at the time of the theft is worth $11,500 and you have a $250 deductible, your insurance should pay $11,250. If you have an old car worth $1,150 with the same $250 deductible, you are due only $900. Quite a difference! And the math works the same for a collision or any other type of covered damage.

Naturally the price you pay for your physical damage coverages goes down along with the value of your car. And as long as you still are making car payments, the bank will require you to keep these coverages in effect. Once you pay off the car loan, consider if the amount you may receive for a total loss (minus your deductible) is worth the premium.

One rule of thumb is to consider the car’s remaining useful life. Multiply the number of years by the annual premium. Compare that to how much you will receive for a total loss. How good a deal do you think it would be to keep paying that part of the premium? This is totally subjective. Consider your peace of mind. Even a car that some consider worthless is worth insuring if the loss would cause you to lose your sole method of transportation. Even if your insurance didn’t pay much, if it is enough to get you into another car that meets your needs, then that is a price that may be worth paying.

How do you know how much you will get for a total loss? Generally insurance companies will look at common references for valuing vehicles, such as the “blue book” or average price a similar vehicle is selling for in your area. Ask your Trusted Choice® insurance professional what guidelines your particular insurance carrier will use and plan accordingly.

Physical damage to your old car is the one place in your personal auto insurance it may actually make sense to minimize or eliminate coverages. You not only face getting less money from a settlement, but if you are like many, a scratched fender may not seem nearly as important to fix when the rest of the car is being held together with duct tape.

What Are You Looking For?

 

Find Us On Facebook

Get in Touch

127 South Peyton Street
Alexandria, VA 22314
Phone: 800.221.7917
Fax: 703.683.7556
Email: Trusted.Choice@iiaba.net