Let’s get something straight. Auto insurance is not a loyalty program. It’s not a safety net you “earned.” And it’s definitely not your friend. It’s a catastrophic risk tool—and almost everyone uses it wrong.
Auto insurance is not a loyalty program. It's not a safety net you "earned." And it's definitely not your friend.
Here’s the short list. If any of these are true, insurance probably makes sense:
That's it.
You need to do the math first—because the math is ugly.
Let’s say you file a claim for a $2,500 repair. You think: “That’s why I pay insurance.” Here’s what actually happens.
Typical deductible: $1,000
Your "covered" repair is now: $1,500
Already not amazing.
Your insurance was: $180/month ($2,160/year)
After claim, it jumps to: $300/month ($3,600/year)
That's a $1,440 increase per year.
Now here's the part nobody tells you:
That increase is not temporary. It doesn't magically reset after a year. It doesn't care about your "good driving history." It stays until you fight your way out of it—or switch carriers.
$1,440 per year × 3 years = $4,320
Plus deductible: + $1,000
TOTAL: $5,320
You just paid over $5,000 to cover a $2,500 repair.
Congratulations. You lost twice.
This is the hidden landmine. Once you file a claim, Carfax, AutoCheck, and dealer internal databases all flag your car.
Even a minor cosmetic claim can:
On higher-end vehicles: $2,000–$5,000+ loss at resale
That's not protection. That's a tax.
People love to say: “I’ve paid premiums for decades. I deserve to use it.” That logic died years ago.
Everyone's rates go up.
Even people with:
Unless your state explicitly says your rates won't rise—and you've confirmed it in writing—assume any claim increases your long-term cost.
Insurance companies don't reward loyalty. They price risk. And a claim = risk.
In the current market, customer-pay repairs almost always make more sense when:
And yes—this applies even if the accident wasn't your fault, unless the other party's insurance is handling everything cleanly and your carrier is untouched.
Using insurance for small repairs is like using a chainsaw to cut butter. You can do it—but you'll regret it.
If your car is twisted in half, use insurance.
If it's not, pause.
Because once you file that claim, there's no undo button.
And math doesn't care how long you've been paying premiums.
What a $2,500 claim actually costs
Resale value loss from claim history
Get a customer-pay quote and compare it to your insurance math. You might be shocked.
Call for ConsultationGet your car back faster, repaired better, and often without paying a deductible. That's not just a good deal—that's a better system.