Definition / Meaning of Auto comprehensive coverage
Auto comprehensive coverage, often simply called comprehensive coverage or “comp,” is an optional part of an auto insurance policy that helps pay to repair or replace your car if it is damaged by something other than a collision. While a collision claim covers damage from hitting another car or object, comprehensive coverage handles the “other” events often called “acts of God” or “non-collision” incidents. Think of it as protection against the unexpected things that can happen to your parked or moving vehicle that are not caused by a crash with another vehicle or a stationary object like a tree or a guardrail.
What Does Comprehensive Coverage Cover?
Comprehensive insurance is broad and covers a wide range of potential damages. Common events that are typically covered include:
- Theft: If your vehicle is stolen, comprehensive coverage can pay for its value, minus your deductible.
- Vandalism: Damage caused by someone intentionally damaging your car, such as keying the paint, breaking windows, or slashing tires.
- Natural Disasters: Damage from events like hail, hurricanes, tornadoes, floods, earthquakes, lightning strikes, and wildfires.
- Falling Objects: Damage from a tree limb, a rock, or other debris falling onto your car.
- Fire and Explosions: If your car catches fire or is damaged in an explosion.
- Animal Damage: Hitting an animal (like a deer, moose, or dog) is typically covered under comprehensive, not collision. Damage from rodents chewing wires is also often included.
- Glass Damage: A cracked windshield or broken window is usually covered under comprehensive, and some policies offer a separate zero-deductible option just for glass repair.
What Is Not Covered?
It is equally important to know what comprehensive coverage does not cover. Generally, it excludes:
- Collision with another car or object: This is covered by collision coverage.
- Damage to another person’s vehicle or property: This is covered by liability coverage.
- Injury to you or your passengers: This is covered by medical payments or personal injury protection.
- Normal wear and tear, mechanical breakdown, or routine maintenance: Comprehensive is for sudden and unexpected damage, not for breakdowns due to age or lack of maintenance.
- Personal belongings stolen from your car: While the theft of the car itself is covered, items inside (like a laptop or phone) are typically covered by your homeowners or renters insurance, not your auto policy.
How It Works and Why You Might Need It
If you have a comprehensive claim, you will pay your chosen deductible first. The insurance company then pays for the remaining cost of the repair or the actual cash value of the car if it is totaled. For example, if a hailstorm causes $3,000 in damage and you have a $500 comprehensive deductible, your insurer will pay $2,500.
Comprehensive coverage is almost always required if you have a car loan or lease. The lender wants to protect its investment in your vehicle. Once you own your car outright, the choice is yours. However, it is generally recommended for newer or more valuable cars. As a rule of thumb, if your annual comprehensive premium is more than 10% of your car’s value, you might consider dropping it. For older vehicles with a low market value, the cost of the coverage may not be worth the potential payout.
Like collision coverage, comprehensive coverage is subject to a deductible, typically ranging from $100 to $1,000. Choosing a higher deductible can lower your premium, but it means you will pay more out of pocket if you file a claim. Comprehensive claims are often filed for events that are not your fault, and they typically do not cause your credit score to go down, but they can lead to a small increase in your insurance premium at renewal time in some states.