Tuesday, February 8, 2022

Is the Bare Minimum Car Insurance Okay?

 

Buying a car can be an expensive prospect, especially when buying a new vehicle, and car payments are just the beginning.  There are also various fees that must be paid, such as the cost for getting the vehicle registered and, of course, the cost of insurance.

When buying your Greensboro car insurance, you'll learn that there are two classifications:

  1. Car insurance required by North Carolina law for all vehicles operated on public roads
  2. Optional car insurance not required by law but recommended for your protection
Insurance Required By Law

All but a couple of U.S. states mandate a certain amount of car insurance for drivers.  Each state has their own requirements regarding types and minimum amounts of coverage required, but the main focus is for bodily injury liability and property damage liability coverages.  Some states also require protection against uninsured drivers and for Personal Injury Protection (PIP) insurance.

In North Carolina, the legal requirement  is for a minimum of $30,000 per person bodily injury liability protection per accident, $60,000 for all persons in bodily injury liability protection per accident and $25,000 in liability coverage for property damage.  You're also required to have the same dollar amounts ($30K/$60K/$25K) in uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage.

Why Carrying Bare Minimum Car Insurance Is a Bad Idea

Required liability coverage is meant for "the other guy" involved in an accident that you cause.  The money paid out goes to help pay towards injuries and/or property damage sustained as a result of your driving errors.  There are two major problems to consider regarding this "bare minimum" coverage.

  1. Your Greensboro car insurance liability coverage does nothing to pay for your injuries or property damage.  To be protected for your own losses in an accident you've caused, you must add certain optional coverage to your insurance policy such as collision coverage, personal injury protection (PIP) or medical  payments coverage.
  2. The bodily injury and property damage liability amounts required by law are extremely low compared to actual costs typically seen as a result of an auto accident claim.  If an accident you cause seriously injures a third party and they require significant medical services, charges can amount to tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars.  Multiply this by the number of passengers injured from the other car and you can see how woefully inadequate "bare minimum" coverage is.  Experts suggest you should carry five or ten times the minimum required.

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