Short Period Car Insurance

by Mike Lamm

If you are looking for a short term car insurance policy theres a good chance that you may not even need it…

Is temporary car insurance necessary if you are getting a rental car?

The rental service will offer you some combination of liability coverage, personal effects coverage, accident insurance, and/or a loss damage waiver (more commonly known as LDW). If you have your own car and have the respective car insurance, you are most likely covered for each of these 4 insurances. As such, getting even one of them is likely a waste of money. You just have to make sure that you are using the car for recreational and not business use.

Below is a list of the 4 insurance types that the rental car company may offer you and why you probably don’t need them…

Liability coverage: The liability insurance on your own policy will protect you.

Loss Damage Waiver: The collision & comprehensive coverage, which you probably have on you auto, make the LDW superfluous. Collision coverage pays for damages to the car regardless of who is at fault and comprehensive coverage pays for damage caused by things such as a thunderstorm or a collision with a deer.

Personal accident insurance or accident coverage: If you already have either Personal Injury Protection, Medical Payments Coverage, or health insurance, you can skip on this additional insurance.

Personal effects coverage: Rental car companies offer this type of coverage for stolen items. However, it is very likely that your homeowners or renters insurance already covers items that are stolen not just inside the house, but outside of it as well.

To be on the safe side, it is best to call both you car and house insurer to make sure that both policies carry over. Or, you can just read your policy. Its likely that you’ll get some type of insurance from your credit card company as well.

What if you’re borrowing somebody’s car?

If you have your own car insurance, you needn’t worry. Your own auto insurance transfers over. Additionally, the lenders car insurance policy will transfer to you. But what happens if you want to borrow a car and don’t have auto coverage for yourself?

Lack of liability coverage is the main thing, which can hurt you, if you are borrowing somebody’s car. If the lenders liability coverage is not enough (say it is $4,000 short of paying for the damages), you are responsible for the difference in an accident in which you are found to be guilty. You don’t have to worry about this happening if you get a nonowners policy, which provides liability coverage for those who borrow others cars. And, as always, if you are the innocent party in an accident, the guilty one will pay for the repairs (this isn’t the case in every state as some are no-fault states).

If you borrow a car, who pays for damages done to the car itself? The collision and/or comprehensive coverage of the owner will pay if you are guilty, the other party will pay if they are guilty, and your coverage may pay if you have your own full coverage (comprehensive & collision).

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