Is Your Car Worth Less Than Your Loan?


Car loans and leases used to last no longer than three years. Today, with vehicles now as expensive as small homes, the length of loans and leases has increased dramatically, stretched out to four or even five years.

Whether your vehicle is a coupe, sedan, van, sports utility vehicle, or truck, one thing is guaranteed. Your vehicle’s value will depreciate very quickly. A rapid loss of actual value accompanied by a longer loan obligation spells trouble.

In short order, the amount of the unpaid loan and lease agreement balance becomes much larger than the vehicle's value and this disparity exists over much of the loan or lease period. Making matters worse is that this gap is usually only discovered after a total loss. After the insurer pays its obligation, you may have to pay the bank or leasing company thousands of dollars out of your own pocket.

Nobody is to blame for this problem-not the bank, leasing company, insurer or the car manufacturer. The situation is an unfortunate side effect of the need to extend financing to accommodate extremely expensive vehicles. However; there are a couple of solutions to the dilemma.

The Auto Loan/Lease Coverage Endorsement

This optional coverage is available in most states, from a variety of insurance companies. The form provides coverage for the following:

Exclusions

Generally this optional coverage excludes items such as overdue lease payments, penalties (for excessive use, abnormal wear and tear, or high mileage), security deposits, costs of warranties or various types of credit insurance, or carryover balances from a previous lease.

Auto Replacement Cost Coverage

For an additional premium, a new car owner may buy coverage to settle major losses based on the vehicle's replacement cost rather than its depreciated value. There are some limitations such as:

Considering these limitations, the replacement cost option is more suited to narrowing, rather than closing the lease/loan gap.

If you have a newer vehicle and are concerned that you could suffer a large out-of-pocket expense if your car is totaled, you should talk to a qualified insurance professional to answer your questions. You may find that the extra protection is worth the extra cost.

Revised 08/03


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