What's Different About Michigan's No Fault Auto Insurance?

By Ryan Morelli


There are some things about Michigan auto insurance that you might not be familiar with if you've only registered cars in other areas in the US. This insurance is legally required in this state, and made up of three major segments. These are residual liability for bodily injury and property damage to others, personal injury insurance and property protection insurance. When registering a car in Michigan, it's important to be able to prove you possess this insurance, since driving without it is illegal.

Policies under Michigan's no fault insurance provide for reimbursement of medical costs plus lost income from your injury for up to three years. The amount you can receive for this was around four and a half thousand dollars as of 2007. This amount also applies when someone who has died in an accident and who has Michigan auto insurance. His or her family will receive up to that amount every month for three years to make up for the lost income.

If someone is in an accident and his or her injury prevents basic family services from being provided, such as housekeeping, up to twenty dollars per day to hire others to do this for them is also available. You can choose to synchronize your coverage to any existing health or disability policy if you'd like to reduce your premium, as long as it's not a Medicare or Medicaid policy (these cannot be synchronized). That makes the synchronized policy the primary payer, and the your Michigan auto insurance is responsible for covering what's left.

If you have Michigan no fault insurance, your policy will pay up to a million dollars in damage done by your car to other people's property, such as fences, buildings, lamp posts and other objects. If you do damage to someone else's vehicle, and that car is properly parked, this policy will also pay for that damage.

The no fault law for Michigan auto insurance also protects people who are insured under this policy from being sued outside of particular situations. If you cause an accident in which someone else is seriously injured or killed, are involved in an accident with a car not registered in that state, or you're involved in an accident outside of state, you may be sued.

In addition, if you were more than fifty percent at fault in an accident, you may be sued for up to five hundred dollars in damage to the other car. However, in situations where you're sued or are legally responsible for damages, your Michigan no fault insurance will pay up to your coverage limits.

In this state, you're required to carry a certain amount of coverage. That includes at least twenty thousand dollars worth of coverage for bodily injury and property damage for every person hurt or killed in an accident. Forty thousand dollars worth of coverage is required in case of accidents where multiple people are injured or killed. Another ten thousand dollars worth of coverage is required for property damage outside of Michigan, and you're responsible for the excess paid in all cases where the award exceeds your coverage.

There are some things that aren't covered by Michigan no fault insurance, too. For instance, there's no requirement for insurance to cover repairs to your car, for comprehensive coverage (which handles flood, animal, fire, vandalism and theft damages) or for uninsured or underinsured motorist coverage. You have to buy coverage for this to have it dealt with as part of your Michigan auto insurance.




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