StitchesGr8Fan
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jul 17, 2009
- Messages
- 5,994
Something to keep in mind is that most auto insurance policies are written to give you the value of the car at the time it is totaled. A car loses a large chunk of its value the minute it is titled and driven off of the lot. So what the insurance company is required to give you is the value of your car considering it is now "used" at X months old and with X miles on it. This is generally going to be at least $3-5K off what you paid for it when you bought it. They aren't required to give you the value that you paid for the car when it was new, or give you enough money to buy the same car new again.
There is at least one insurance company that advertises a policy where they will give you the money to buy the same car new again if yours is totaled in the first year. However, when I checked it out it had a much higher premium and I doubt that most people would purchase it.
The only way to know for sure what OP can expect is for her or her husband to check their specific policy. An insurance company isn't going to give you more than they are required according to the policy out of the goodness of their heart, because they feel badly that a pregnant client's fairly new SUV got hit in a parking lot by a doctor who makes more money than her and doesn't seem to feel bad about what she did.
There is at least one insurance company that advertises a policy where they will give you the money to buy the same car new again if yours is totaled in the first year. However, when I checked it out it had a much higher premium and I doubt that most people would purchase it.
The only way to know for sure what OP can expect is for her or her husband to check their specific policy. An insurance company isn't going to give you more than they are required according to the policy out of the goodness of their heart, because they feel badly that a pregnant client's fairly new SUV got hit in a parking lot by a doctor who makes more money than her and doesn't seem to feel bad about what she did.