The law in California is that every owner of a vehicle is required to have
$15/30k in "liability" insurance so if the driver causes injury or damage, his or
her insurance company will pay up to $15,000 per person up to a maximum of $30,000). No
other form of insurance is required.
Last week
(see HOW MUCH IS ENOUGH AUTO INSURANCE?) I explained why it was my recommendation that $2 million
dollars is the appropriate amount of insurance to get through the use of primary and
umbrella coverage. This week, I will be advising you on what "extra" insurance is worth
buying.
The answer is to tell your insurance
agent that you also want MED PAY and UNINSURED/UNDERINSURED MOTORIST coverage. Also COLLISION
coverage if you want your car repaired.
Med Pay is
short for Medical Payments Coverage. Usually your auto insurance carrier will add this onto your
policy for a very nominal additional charge. Most companies offer $2,000 or $5,000 in medical
payments coverage. Most will also offer $10,000 or even $25,000 (which is what I have).
This coverage means that no matter who causes the accident, your medical bills and those of
your passengers (remember 40 million Americans (of a total of 300 million) do not have health
insurance) will be covered by your auto insurance carrier. Some people say they don't need it
because they have health insurance and while there is some truth to this, everyone knows
that with standard health insurance, you have to pay your co-pays (which you can get reimbursed for
under your Med Pay coverage) and you can only go to certain approved doctors. With Med Pay,
you can go to any doctor you want (even chiropractors, acupuncturists and in some cases, massage
therapists). Many Kaiser members are unhappy with the type of treatment that Kaiser
offers especially physical therapy (which sometimes is along the lines of "Here are two
exercise bands; go home and do the exercises we showed you for 6 weeks") and they use
their Med Pay to go to a facility like what Jerry Rice or Joe Montana would go to (with
hot and cold pack therapy, electro-stimulation, ultra-sound, massage therapy, supervised use
of strengthening machines, passive motion therapy/stretching and all around
top-of-the-line treatment). Be aware however that some auto carriers classify
their Med Pay as "secondary" which means that you must first submit your bills to
your health insurance carrier if you have one and if they don't pay, then you can try to get it paid
under your Med Pay. Carriers who classify their Med Pay as "secondary" are a huge pain in
the neck to get to pay your bills. As a result, many people just give up and
pay the bills themselves. So I recommend that you shop around and try to buy insurance
from a carrier that does not classify their Med Pay as "secondary".
Out of time for now so next week I will tell you why I
recommend another "extra" to get when you get auto insurance is
UNINSURED/UNDERINSURED MOTORIST COVERAGE.