Wherever you live in the United States, you should carry auto insurance. Most states require it, along with minimum coverage levels you must buy. In states that don’t require auto insurance, you must show that you have enough assets in case you cause an accident, and if you don’t have enough assets you then have to buy auto insurance.
However, the state minimum is not necessarily “adequate.” The Insurance Information Institute recommends you carry $100,000 of bodily injury protection per person and $300,000 per accident.
How to read liability limits
Here’s how to read the following table of liability minimums.
First number: bodily injury liability maximum for one person injured in an accident.
Second number: bodily injury liability maximum for all injuries in one accident.
Third number: property damage liability maximum for one accident.
Thus, in Alabama, for example, the minimum liability limits are $20,000 for injury liability for one person in an accident, $40,000 for all injuries in an accident, and $10,000 for property damage in an accident.
What is no-fault?
If your state has a “no-fault” auto insurance law, your auto policy must pay medical bills for you and your passengers regardless of who caused the accident. No-fault laws are intended to keep insurance fraud down.
State Liability required? Liability minimums (in thousands of dollars) PIP required? No-fault state? Uninsured motorist coverage required?