Full coverage insurance in Indiana is usually defined as a policy that provides more than the state’s minimum liability coverage, which is $25,000 in bodily injury coverage per person, up to $50,000 per accident, and $25,000 in property damage coverage. Full coverage in Indiana also includes optional collision and comprehensive insurance. As a result, full coverage insurance costs an average of $1,432 per year in Indiana, while a state minimum policy costs $422 per year.
If you can’t afford to repair or replace your car after an accident, collision and comprehensive are important coverage types—even if they’re not required. Collision insurance covers repair or replacement costs if you are in an accident, drive into an object, or flip your car. Comprehensive insurance covers repair or replacement costs if your car is damaged by falling objects, natural disasters, floods, fires, theft, vandalism, or animals. Lenders usually require collision and comprehensive in addition to the insurance you must have under Indiana law when you finance a car.
Most people should also choose higher liability coverage limits than what is required by Indiana law. If you cause an accident and your liability limits don’t cover the whole bill, you are still personally responsible for the rest. In the end, “full coverage” means having the right amount of coverage to protect your assets in a worst-case scenario.
This answer was last updated on 05/01/24 and it was first published on 07/12/23. For the most current information about a financial product, you should always check and confirm accuracy with the offering financial institution. Editorial and user-generated content is not provided, reviewed or endorsed by any company.