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New Car Replacement Insurance Explained
You’ll probably appreciate new car replacement insurance if your car is totaled, but in most cases the extra coverage comes at a price.
Lisa Green leads the auto insurance team and oversees insurance-focused data journalism at NerdWallet. A professional journalist since high school, she was an insurance writer at NerdWallet before becoming a managing editor. Previously, Lisa spent more than 20 years as an editor at The Tennessean in Nashville, where she led business and consumer coverage for several years. At The Tennessean, she was part of a 2011 Pulitzer Prize finalist team for coverage of devastating floods in Middle Tennessee. Her work has also won awards from the Society for Advancing Business Editing and Writing, Investigative Reporters and Editors, and the Society of Professional Journalists. Lisa is an alumna of the Wharton Seminars for Business Journalists at the University of Pennsylvania. She has also studied data journalism with the National Institute for Computer-Assisted Reporting, business editing with the American Press Institute, and writing, editing and news research with the Poynter Institute. In addition to her work at NerdWallet, Lisa is a real estate investor and has taught a seminar on how to earn college scholarships. She is based in Nashville.
Lacie Glover is a contributing writer at NerdWallet. She was previously a full-time Nerd, serving as an editor and writer covering health care costs and all types of insurance. As a writer, Lacie's work has been featured in The Associated Press, The Motley Fool and U.S. News & World Report. Lacie is a NerdWallet authority on insurance products and loves data, analytics and solving SEO mysteries.
Brenda J. Cude is Professor Emeritus in the Department of Financial Planning, Housing and Consumer Economics at the University of Georgia. Dr. Cude has served in various consumer-focused roles for the National Association of Insurance Commissioners since 1994. She has also been a member of the Advisory Council for the Center for Insurance Policy and Research; a Board Member of the Coalition Against Insurance Fraud; a member of the Federal Advisory Committee on Insurance; and a Board Member for the Insurance Marketplace Standards Association. Dr. Cude’s primary research interest is consumer decision-making, with an emphasis in personal financial literacy.
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Before you drive a new car off the dealer’s lot, you may want to consider new car replacement insurance.
Say your car — your new baby — is stolen or totaled in an accident. Comprehensive and collision insurance, both typically required for the life of an auto loan, will pay out up to the car’s value, minus any deductible.
See what you could save on car insurance
Easily compare personalized rates to see how much switching car insurance could save you.
A deductible is the amount you're responsible for paying if you file a claim. When you buy your insurance policy, you select your deductible. If you choose a high deductible you'll have a lower car insurance premium, but you'll also pay more out-of-pocket if you make a claim.
But because new vehicles lose value quickly, that claim check will be less than what you paid for the car, leaving you in a financial bind with no ride.
New car replacement insurance, an option with some insurers, offers to ease the financial pain. It pays the value of a brand-new car of the same make and model, minus the deductible, if your car is declared a total loss.
New car replacement insurance generally costs extra and is available only if you buy collision and comprehensive insurance.
Who offers new car replacement insurance?
New car replacement insurance isn’t universally available. Some of the nation’s largest auto insurance companies, including Geico, Progressive and State Farm, don’t offer it. And among companies that do offer it, new car replacement coverage may not be available in all states.
The companies in the table below describe their policies online. But others may offer new car replacement coverage as well, so be sure to check with your insurer.
Insurer
Details
Acuity
Covers first 4 years of new vehicle ownership. Also available for motorcycles.
Covers first 5 years of new vehicle ownership. Also includes gap coverage and lower deductible for glass claims.
How much new car replacement insurance costs
Pricing varies by driver, vehicle and state, so some companies don’t provide cost details.
To give a rough idea, Farmers says the cost for its new car replacement insurance varies, but typically adds about 5% to 13% of the price of your comprehensive and collision coverage. So if your Farmers comprehensive and collision insurance costs $100 a month, you'd pay an extra $5 to $13 a month to add new car replacement coverage.
Some insurers like Shelter, include new car replacement coverage at no extra cost; other companies bundle it with a package of upgrades.
If you don’t drive a new car, replacement coverage may not be available to you. But you may be able to get “newer car replacement” or “better car replacement” policies at some companies, including:
Acuity.
Erie.
The Hanover.
Liberty Mutual.
The optional better car replacement coverage at Liberty Mutual, for example, will pay you the value of a car that’s a model year newer and has 15,000 fewer miles on it than your totaled car.
New car replacement vs. gap insurance
While new car replacement insurance can help you buy a new car, gap insurance is designed to make sure you can pay off the old one.
If your car is totaled or stolen and your collision or comprehensive insurance doesn’t cover what you owe on the car’s loan or lease, gap insurance pays the difference minus any deductible. Prices vary, but generally gap coverage costs a few dollars a month, according to the Insurance Information Institute.
Before you buy gap insurance or new car replacement coverage:
Understand the terms and conditions. Depending on the insurer, gap coverage might be available for more years than new car replacement coverage — beneficial if you have a loan.
Get quotes to compare the costs of gap insurance and new car replacement coverage, especially if you owe more than the car is worth.
If you skip gap or new car replacement coverage, make sure you have enough in savings to both repay a lender if the car is totaled and make a down payment toward another car.
If you do opt for new car replacement insurance, be sure to cancel it once your car is over the age limit or mileage specified by your insurer. Otherwise, you might end up paying for expired coverage.
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