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Are You Covered?
  • Don’t Be Fooled: The Auto Insurance Minimums in Your State Probably Aren’t Enough
    There are a wide variety of April Fool’s Day jokes out there but one thing you should avoid falling for is being told that carrying the state mandated minimum coverage is adequate insurance protection. 
  • 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?
  • Spending President’s Day Weekend Car Shopping? Don’t Forget Your Insurance Coverage!
    If you’re in the market for a new car, depending on what type of vehicle you’re looking for, President’s Day Weekend may be the time to find it. But whether you’re buying your first car or trading in for a “Presidential” upgrade, it’s important to keep in mind a few things about auto insurance when shopping for a new car.
  • 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.
  • Driving in Snow? Go Nice and Slow!
    When staying home is not an option and you must brave winter roads, your Trusted Choice® agent advises you to remember the ageless moral of the tortoise and hare: Slow and steady wins the race.
  • Make 2013 a No-Keys New Year’s Eve
    On Monday night, millions of people will ring in the New Year with friends, family, and loved ones. However, amidst all the festivities, toasts, and celebrating, safety can quickly take a backseat to a good time – especially when alcohol is added to the mix.
  • 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?”
  • Is a GPS Covered by an Auto Policy?
    Some may view them as science fiction gone wild. Others see them as indispensable, possibly life-saving tools. Regardless of your feelings about Global Positioning Systems (GPS), they continue to occupy the dashboards of millions of U.S. vehicles each year. The pervasiveness and expense of the technology has drivers asking if their GPS systems are covered by auto insurance.
  • 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.
  • First Car, First Insurance Question: Does My Teen Driver Need Their Own Policy?
    How to insure a teenager’s car has got to be one of the most common questions Trusted Choice ® independent insurance agents get asked year after year. Here are a few things to consider when deciding whether your teen should have their own policy.
  • 5 Things to Discuss with Your Teen Driver
    Here are five subjects you’ll want to cover with your teenager when it comes to driving.
  • 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.
First Car, First Insurance Question: Does My Teen Driver Need Their Own Policy?

first car.jpgHow to insure a teenager’s car has got to be one of the most common questions Trusted Choice ® independent insurance agents get asked year after year. Should parents title and insure a teen driver’s car separately from other cars in the household? This is normally done with an eye to save some premium dollars and to reduce potential liability for the parents- at least on the surface. The reality is that insuring a teen driver’s car separately can actually open some pretty big gaps in coverage that a parent may still find they’re liable for. So here are a few things to consider when deciding whether your teen should have their own policy:


How would adding my teen driver to my policy affect my rates?

Adding any driver to your auto policy will likely increase the rates, as it increases the potential for someone to have an accident. Adding teenagers in particular can increase the rates as they are among the most inexperienced drivers. Some of that can be offset by completing a driver’s education or defensive driving program, and many insurance companies offer a “good student” discount.


How could having my teen driver on a separate policy affect my liability coverage?


The argument that a teen driver should obtain a separate policy with less coverage to keep costs down ignores several potential problems- chief among them that in many states the parents are still legally liable for their child’s actions- particularly if they are still minors- and therefore the parents could still be sued for their child’s actions behind the wheel regardless of whether the teen driver has a separate policy. If the teen driver DOES have a separate policy, the parents own auto insurance might not come into play, and they could be left with a very large bill.


Another scenario many families face is how to deal with multiple children at home who are driving. Consider the example of parents with two children, one who is 19 and her 17 year old brother. Assume that when the daughter turned 18 the parents decided to put her on a separate policy to save money- one with less coverage than their own, figuring she didn’t have nearly the assets that they did. Most policies contain a limitation for the use of a vehicle that is owned by a family member and not specifically covered by another insurance policy. What this means is that while the limitation may not apply to the parents, it does apply to any other family member who is normally covered by their policy- in this case the 17 year old son. If the younger brother were to borrow his older sister’s car and get into an accident, he would have coverage under her policy, but it would only be for whatever coverage was in his sister’s policy. Depending on the state, because he is still a minor, his parents could be liable for damages he’s caused and be stuck without coverage.

 
Weighing the long and short term costs


When considering whether to put a teen driver on a separate policy parents should weigh short term savings on premium against the implications having a loss could have on their family’s finances. Defensive driving courses, good student discounts and establishing safe driving habits that lead to lower rates on renewal are ways to reduce the burden of adding teen drivers and their cars to a parent’s auto policy. Separate policies could have much larger and longer term financial implications if there was an accident. Discuss your family’s needs with a Trusted Choice agent. Trusted Choice agents have the ability to represent multiple insurance companies and can help you find the right match for your needs.

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