Comprehensive and Collision Insurance Worth It?
Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by PE_T, Jun 2, 2019.
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Rideandrepair, PE_T, Tombstone69 and 1 other person Thank this.
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I'd be wary about declining comprehensive. Coworker of mine had his old beater car stolen out of his driveway. Thief ditched it in a no parking zone. Got a parking ticket and then it was towed and impounded the next day. Almost 2 weeks later he was notified his car was in impound. He was on the hook for the ticket, towing AND impound fees. He was really lucky the towing company was sympathetic and cut him a decent break on the impound fees. Had he had comprehensive coverage the insurance company would have covered those costs as they were incurred due to the theft.
Rideandrepair, Dino soar and PE_T Thank this. -
You might want to rethink that. It only takes a second to have a complete loss. Someone's shoddy electrical work that happened before you even owned it. And poof. Your out a truck. Yup. It was mine.
Edit. Evn with insurance you can get screwed. I bought the truck needing work. Did 10 tires, clutch, rebuilt APU, 2 New seats and more I can't remember sunk into it first few months...
Then.....
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I only did it because my first truck cost $12,000 and the savings were worth it. It was a 91 T800 in 2008.Rideandrepair and PE_T Thank this. -
Insurance went by what I paid for it and "actual cash value" so I lost all the money I put into it and some.Midwest Trucker, Rideandrepair and PE_T Thank this. -
I don't understand how the insurance works with the actual value or insured value vs what they payout.
I'm going to have to talk further with the agent who's going to write my policy, but I spoke with a bunch of Agents previously, and the consensus seemed to be that whatever value you insure your truck at doesn't mean they're going to give you that value if the truck is totaled.
Does that make sense to anyone?Rideandrepair and PE_T Thank this. -
PE_T Thanks this.
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I say "theoretically" because most companies base the cost on experience of repair costs and claims, and the premium may not drop that much. However, it will be less than a newer vehicle of the same type.
There are some policies from some companies for "declared value". These are antique and show vehicles which see limited use and are appraised as an antique or show vehicle (think 1970 Hemi Roadrunner, etc.)
I do not know if this can apply to antique trucks as well such as a 60's GMC or early Diamond Reo. I would think so as insurance is a business and there is a market.
That is a lot of words just to say that if you have a vehicle that is $75K in value, that is the basis of what you will be paying, not a $100K basis.Last edited: Jun 6, 2019
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