Full coverage vs liability only
Understand what “full coverage” typically includes, when lenders require it, and how to decide whether to keep or drop comp and collision.
Understand what “full coverage” typically includes, when lenders require it, and how to decide whether to keep or drop comp and collision.
“Full coverage” is not a standardized insurance term. People usually mean liability plus comprehensive and collision. Some add-ons (rental, roadside, gap, OEM parts) may or may not be included.
If your vehicle is financed or leased, your lender typically requires comprehensive and collision until the loan is paid off. If you are paid off, you can decide based on value and risk.
These simple examples are not recommendations, but they show how people might think about full coverage vs liability only.
Before you change coverage, ask your insurer to show both versions of the quote—full coverage and liability‑only—and walk you through what would happen in a total loss scenario for each option.