Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Combined Single Limit vs. Split Limits

Here is some technical trivia. Most of us have "split limit" insurance. For example these numbers may look familiar - 100/300/50 or 15/30/10. These numbers refer to your liability coverage for personal injury and property damage. They are familiar, because that is how it is sold to us. 100/300/50 means that if I cause an accident that causes bodily injury, I have $100,000 of liability coverage per person and a total of $300,000 per incident. The third number means I have $50,000 for property damage liability coverage. These numbers are fairly standard, and considered by most to be OK coverage. But lets take a closer look.

Just say: you cause an accident that hurts two people and two cars. Injured person "A" claims $120,000 for injury and lost salary during recovery. Injured person "B" claims $130,000 for injury and lost salary. The first car is a total lost at $20,000 but the second car has $35,000 worth of damage. Total damage for this serious accident were $305,00. However, because of the split limits, you are now on the hook for $50,000 for bodily injury and $5,000 for property damage. Do you have an extra $55,000 laying around somewhere?

With combined single limit coverage - of $300,00 would cost you $5,000. And the combined single limit for $500,000 or even $1,000,000 is not all that more expensive - considering what a serious accident could really cost you.

Talk to your agent about Combined Single Limit Insurance, or give me a call.

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