Car insurance is a contract: you pay a regular premium, and in exchange the insurer agrees to cover certain costs if you crash, get hit, or your car is stolen or damaged. The trade is simple โ you swap a small, predictable cost now for protection against a large, unpredictable one later. The details are where people get caught out.
The main coverage types
- Liability โ pays for injuries and property damage you cause to others. It's the part most places legally require, because it protects everyone else on the road from you.
- Collision โ pays to repair or replace your own car after a crash, regardless of fault.
- Comprehensive โ covers non-crash damage: theft, fire, vandalism, falling objects, weather, hitting an animal.
- Uninsured/underinsured motorist โ protects you when the at-fault driver has no (or too little) insurance.
- Medical / personal injury โ helps with medical costs for you and your passengers, depending on the policy and region.
Premiums and deductibles: the core trade-off
Your premium is what you pay to hold the policy. Your deductible is what you pay out of pocket on a claim before the insurer covers the rest. They move in opposite directions: a higher deductible lowers your premium but costs you more when you actually file a claim, and vice versa. Pick a deductible you could realistically pay on a bad day.
Liability limits are often written as three numbers, e.g. 100/300/100: $100k bodily injury per person, $300k per accident, $100k property damage. Minimums required by law are frequently far too low to cover a serious crash โ which is how an "insured" driver still ends up personally on the hook.
What affects your rate
Insurers price the risk you represent. Common factors: your driving record, age and experience, where you live, the car's make/model and repair cost, how many miles you drive, your chosen limits and deductible, and in many places a credit-based insurance score. Tickets and at-fault accidents can raise premiums for years.
Why going without is a bad bet
Driving uninsured swaps a manageable monthly cost for unlimited downside: one at-fault crash can mean paying for the other car, the other driver's injuries, fines, license suspension, and an SR-22 filing that brands you high-risk and inflates premiums for years. That asymmetry is the whole point of Drive Home.
The bottom line
Car insurance turns a catastrophic, unpredictable cost into a small, predictable one. Understand the coverage types, set a deductible you can actually afford, and don't let bare-minimum liability fool you into thinking you're fully protected. The cheapest policy is rarely the one that saves you the most when it matters.
General information, not insurance or legal advice. Coverage and requirements vary by region and policy.