Deductibles explained for vehicle insurance

Understand collision and comprehensive deductibles, how they affect premiums, and how to choose a deductible you can actually afford.

Last updated February 12, 2026

What a deductible is

A deductible is the amount you pay out of pocket on a covered claim before insurance pays the rest. Deductibles typically apply to collision and comprehensive coverage (and sometimes to other add-ons, depending on state and insurer).

How to pick a deductible

Rule of thumb
Choose a deductible you can comfortably pay tomorrow without debt.
Step 1: Set your “easy pay” number
If $500 would hurt, do not choose $1,000 just to save a little monthly. If $1,000 is easy, you may choose higher.
Step 2: Compare the savings
Ask how much the premium changes between deductible options. If the savings is tiny, the higher deductible may not be worth it.
Step 3: Think about claim likelihood
If you have a long, safe driving history and good cash reserves, higher deductibles can work. If you expect small claims, lower may be better.
Step 4: Keep quotes consistent
When comparing companies, keep deductibles identical. Different deductibles is one of the most common reasons comparisons fail.

Collision vs comprehensive

  • Collision usually applies when you hit something or another vehicle hits you (regardless of fault) and your car is damaged.
  • Comprehensive often applies to theft, vandalism, weather, animal strikes, and glass. Rules vary by policy.
Many people set comp and collision deductibles differently. For example, a lower comprehensive deductible can make sense if glass claims are common in your area.

Glass coverage questions

  • Is windshield repair or replacement subject to my comprehensive deductible?
  • Is there a lower “glass deductible” option?
  • Are OEM glass or calibration costs covered (important for newer vehicles)?

Example math: when a higher deductible can make sense

Numbers can make the tradeoff clearer. The idea is to compare how much you save in premium over a few years against how much extra you would pay out of pocket if you had a claim.

Example: $500 vs $1,000 collision deductible
Suppose your insurer quotes you:
  • $500 deductible: $1,200 per year
  • $1,000 deductible: $1,050 per year
You save $150 per year by choosing the higher deductible. In a 3‑year period with no claims, that is $450 saved. If you do have one covered collision claim, you would pay $500 more out of pocket once (the difference between $500 and $1,000).
How to think about it
If the premium savings is small (for example $20 a year), taking on an extra $500 of risk may not feel worth it. If the savings is larger and you rarely file small claims, a higher deductible can be reasonable—as long as you can truly afford that amount if something happens tomorrow.

You can ask your insurer or agent to walk through the numbers for each deductible option. The key is to pick a number that both fits your emergency fund and keeps quotes comparable between companies.

Next steps
Use the estimator for a quick range, then get real quotes from 3 to 5 providers using identical settings. If you want us to add a guide topic, contact us.