Comprehensive insurance is a type of automobile insurance that covers damage to your car from causes other than a collision. Comprehensive insurance will cover your vehicle if destroyed by a tornado, dented by a run-in with a deer, spray-painted by a vandal, damaged by a break-in, or crushed by a collapsing garage, among other causes.
Key Takeaways
Understanding Comprehensive Insurance
Comprehensive insurance, collision insurance, and liability insurance are the three components of an automobile insurance policy. In most states, the law requires drivers to carry liability insurance, but collision and comprehensive insurance are optional if someone owns a vehicle outright.1
If a person has financed the vehicle, the auto loan company might require comprehensive insurance.2
What Comprehensive Insurance Covers
In terms of what comprehensive insurance covers, the list includes damages related to:3
Contact with animals, such as hitting a deer Natural disasters, including earthquakes, floods, and hurricanes Fire Riots and vandalism Vehicle theft, or theft of certain parts of the vehicle Broken windshields Fallen objects, including branches, rocks, or hailComprehensive Insurance vs. Collision Insurance
It can make sense to have comprehensive car insurance if you’re buying a brand-new car, regardless of whether you finance it or pay cash. Comprehensive coverage can protect you against minor and major damages caused by things beyond your control, regardless of whatever coverage you may have that extends to accidents.
Where you live can also play a part in your decision of when to have comprehensive coverage. If a person lives in a rural area where collisions with animals are common or in a stormy area that often gets hail, they might want to purchase comprehensive insurance. The same is true if a person lives in a higher-crime part of town where break-ins and theft occur regularly.
Collision insurance protects you in a single-car rollover, a collision with another vehicle, or a collision with an object. It does not cover break-ins or thefts, or weather-related damage. If you lease a car, you’ll be required to purchase collision insurance. Collision insurance comes in handy when you get into an accident to help pay for your vehicle’s repair, and it covers any damage to your car due to potholes in the road.4
Neither insurance will cover medical bills from an accident or damage to another person’s vehicle if you are in an accident.45
Cost of Comprehensive Insurance
Comprehensive covers damage to your car caused by accidents and disasters beyond car accidents. The average cost of comprehensive can range from approximately $134 per year to nearly double that, depending on multiple factors, such as the state you live in.36.
Collision and comprehensive insurance each have their deductibles (liability insurance has no deductible), so a driver can choose different deductibles based on perceived risk levels in each of these areas.
If someone thinks they’re not likely to file a comprehensive claim, but they don’t want to forego comprehensive insurance altogether, they could choose a relatively high $1,000 deductible to lower the premiums. The higher a vehicle’s cash value, the more expensive a comprehensive insurance policy will be.
Understanding how insurance companies determine driver risk classes can help you estimate what you might pay for comprehensive coverage. Where you live, your driving record, and your coverage amounts can determine how much you pay for car insurance, including comprehensive coverage.
For example, the most expensive state to insure a car in is Louisiana, where the average driver spends $1,495 on full car insurance each year. The least expensive state, by comparison, is North Dakota, where drivers pay just $692 per year on average to insure their vehicles.7
Advantages and Disadvantages of Comprehensive Insurance
Comprehensive auto insurance protects you financially from theft, natural accidents, and weather-related damage. This insurance means you won’t end up paying out of pocket if a tree falls on your car or a thief steals your catalytic converter.
There are downsides. If you are in an accident, comprehensive insurance won’t pay for the damage. And comprehensive insurance may be expensive if you are purchasing it along with collision insurance. If your vehicle is older and paid off, you could save money by not purchasing comprehensive coverage, especially if theft and weather-related events are not concerns where you live.