The $40 Decision

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AUTO INSURANCECOVERAGE LIMITS EXPLAINEDINSURANCE AWARENESS

By The Coverage Brief

7/21/20251 min leer

Auto insurance policy with reduced bodily injury liability limits showing minimum coverage risk
Auto insurance policy with reduced bodily injury liability limits showing minimum coverage risk

Maria was careful with money.

When her auto insurance renewal increased, she did what responsible adults do, she asked for options.

Her agent explained there were ways to reduce her premium:

  • Increase the deductible

  • Remove uninsured motorist coverage

  • Lower liability limits

  • Drop bodily injury liability entirely

In Florida, bodily injury liability coverage is not mandatory for all drivers. That detail sounded reassuring. If it wasn’t required, it couldn’t be that important.

The savings were modest, around $40 per month.

She agreed.

Six months later, on a rainy evening, she misjudged a turn. The accident involved two other vehicles. One of the drivers was transported to the hospital.

Medical bills exceeded $80,000.

Her policy covered:

  • $10,000 PIP (for her own injuries)

  • $10,000 Property Damage Liability

There was no bodily injury liability coverage to protect her from claims made by others.

A lawsuit followed.

Wage garnishment became a possibility. Savings were no longer secure. What had felt like a minor adjustment now carried long shadows.

Minimum coverage is legal.

Minimum coverage is not always protective.

Insurance policies are contracts written in limits, exclusions, and definitions. When those limits are lowered, the financial exposure shifts, quietly, to the policyholder.

Maria didn’t commit fraud. She wasn’t reckless. She simply didn’t fully understand what had been removed.

It cost far more than $40.