When searching for ways to lower your car insurance premium, you may be tempted to drop medical payments coverage, aka MedPay, from your policy. After all, it may not be required in your state, and sounds redundant to your health insurance.
But you'd be mistaken to write off MedPay as unnecessary. In fact, the very limitations of most health insurance policies, combined with the glacial pace of insurance settlements and the risks you can offload with this often-misunderstood optional coverage, argue strongly in favor of retaining, if not increasing, your MedPay.
In a nutshell, MedPay makes good on medical bills up to your coverage limit for you, your family and others riding in your vehicle in case of an accident, regardless of who's at fault. Your medical payments coverage moves with you (walking, riding with a friend or on public transportation, in-state or out), as well as with your insured vehicles, regardless of who's driving. It carries no deductible or co-pay.
If you're injured in an accident that another insured driver caused, it can take months for their car insurance company to pay your medical bills. Sure, your health insurance may pay, but increasingly many of us carry high deductibles and co-pays that can stretch our finances to the breaking point before the insurance settlement with the other driver closes.
The beauty of MedPay is it kicks in before the hubcaps stop spinning to pay your medical bills, health insurance deductible and co-pays. It covers myriad other out-of-pocket costs that your health policy probably won't touch, including ambulance fees, chiropractic, dental, prosthetics and, in a worst-case scenario, funeral expenses.
In the 12 "no-fault" states (Florida, Hawaii, Kansas, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, North Dakota, Pennsylvania and Utah), MedPay can even pick up the co-pay on the personal injury protection, or PIP, portion of your car insurance or kick in seamlessly with 100 percent coverage after you've exhausted your PIP.
The premium for MedPay is so miniscule -- often less than $20 per year for up to $10,000 in coverage -- that the benefits you'd receive on just one claim could pay for decades of peace of mind.
"For example, if your health insurance has a $1,000 deductible, a 20 percent co-pay and you have a $5,000 medical claim from an accident, with your health insurance you would typically pay $1,800 out of pocket," says Christy Moulton Perry, director of product management for Great Northwest Insurance Co. "But with your MedPay, you would pay zero out of pocket. That's a big difference."
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Unlike liability coverage, MedPay policy limits do not refer to the total available coverage, but instead to the amount available to each covered injured individual. That means if you, your spouse and your two children were injured in an auto accident, each of you could collect the limit amount on your $5,000 MedPay coverage for a total of $20,000. However, your insurer won't pay the same bills under both your MedPay and liability coverage.
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