The first number indicates bodily injury liability limits for one person injured in an accident, the second number indicates bodily
injury liability limits per accident, and the third number indicates property damage liability limits.
Not exact matches
Insurance policies were structured to include mandatory minimum
liability limits of $ 25,000
per person and $ 50,000
per accident for bodily
injury, and $ 25,000 for physical damage.
The averages are based on a married and employed 45 - year - old female who drives 12,000 miles
per year with policy
limits of $ 100,000 for
injury liability for one person and $ 300,000 for all
injuries.
Connecticut requires that every driver carry minimum
liability limits of $ 20,000
per person and $ 40,000
per accident in bodily
injury coverage and $ 10,000 property damage coverage.
At the least, you're required by law to buy a 20/40/10 policy: minimum bodily
injury liability limits of $ 20,000
per injured person, up to a total of $ 40,000
per accident, and property damage
liability coverage of $ 10,000.
Nevada requires that all drivers maintain
liability limits of at least $ 15,000
per person, $ 30,000
per accident for bodily
injury and $ 10,000 property damage.
Wyoming's automobile financial responsibility law requires minimum
liability limits of $ 25,000
per person, $ 50,000
per accident bodily
injury and $ 20,000 property damage.
Effective July 1, 2018, the minimum insurance
limits will increase to 25/50/20 ($ 25,000
per person / $ 50,000
per accident for bodily
injury liability and $ 20,000 for property damage
liability).
All drivers will need to purchase basic coverage to pay for the other driver's losses which includes bodily
injury liability limits of $ 25,000
per person up to $ 50,000
per accident as well as property damage
liability of $ 10,000.
Analysis used a consistent base profile for the insured driver: a 30 - year - old single male driving a 2013 Honda Accord EX with a good driving history and coverage
limits of $ 50,000 bodily
injury liability per person / $ 100,000 bodily
injury liability per accident / $ 50,000 property damage
liability per accident with a $ 500 deductible for comprehensive and collision.
Bodily
injury liability limits of $ 30,000
per person you injure in an accident and $ 60,000
per accident, and property damage
liability of $ 25,000.
For example, while a given car insurance policy may offer a certain amount of personal
injury liability protection
per person, it may also have a
limit per accident.
Bodily
injury liability limits of $ 25,000
per person you injure in an accident, up to $ 50,000
per accident, and property damage
liability of $ 10,000.
The
limits on bodily
injury liability are $ 25,000
per injured person up to a total of $ 50,000
per accident while the
limits on property damage
liability are $ 10,000.
For example, an insurer may offer personal
injury liability protection for up to $ 100,000
per injured person, while another may have a higher
limit, such as $ 200,000.
Bodily
injury liability limits of $ 25,000
per person you injure in an accident, $ 50,000
per accident and property damage
liability of $ 10,000.
Policy
limits for bodily
injury liability are
per person and
per accident and coverage is written as such.
Carrying Illinois state minimum
liability limits of 25/50/20 — $ 25,000
per person and $ 50,000
per accident for bodily
injury and $ 20,000 for property damage — doesn't give you much protection if you own a home or have savings.
In Florida, FR - 44 has bodily
injury liability limits of $ 100,000
per person, $ 300,000
per accident and property damage
liability limits of $ 50,000.
Bodily
injury liability limits of $ 25,000 for those you injure in an accident and $ 50,000
per accident, and property damage
liability of $ 20,000.
UM coverage will pay up to your
limits — without a deductible — which typically mirror your
liability limits (
per person and
per accident) because UM is basically taking the place of the other driver not having bodily
injury liability coverage.
When the ridesharing app is open but a passenger has not been assigned, referred to as Period 1, Uber and Lyft offer low coverage
limits for drivers:
Liability coverage of 50 / 100/25, which translates into $ 50,000 for bodily
injury per person, $ 100,000 for bodily
injury per accident, and $ 25,000 for property damage.
Bodily
injury liability coverage
per person: $ 15,000 for a standard policy (see notes) Bodily
injury liability coverage
per accident: $ 30,000 for a standard policy Property damage
liability coverage: $ 5,000 for a standard policy Personal
injury protection: $ 15,000
per accident, plus up to $ 250,000 for severe
injuries for a standard policy Uninsured / underinsured motorist coverage: Must match
liability limits if purchasing a standard policy
Bodily
injury liability coverage
per person: $ 25,000 Bodily
injury liability coverage
per accident: $ 50,000 Property damage
liability coverage: $ 25,000 Personal
injury protection: Optional Uninsured / underinsured motorist coverage: Coverage must equal
liability limits, so $ 25,000
per person and $ 50,000
per accident
A minimum of $ 25,000
per person and $ 50,000
per accident for bodily
injury liability and $ 25,000
per accident for property damage
liability, is required by law, but drivers are strongly urged to consider higher
limits.
The
limits of such uninsured motorist bodily
injury coverage shall be equal to the highest
limits of bodily
injury liability coverage for any one vehicle insured under the policy; provided, however, that (i) the
limits shall not exceed one million dollars ($ 1,000,000)
per person and one million dollars ($ 1,000,000)
per accident regardless of whether the highest
limits of bodily
injury liability coverage for any one vehicle insured under the policy exceed those
limits and (ii) a named insured may purchase greater or lesser
limits, except that the
limits shall not be less than the bodily
injury liability limits required pursuant to subdivision (2) of this subsection, and in no event shall an insurer be required by this subdivision to sell uninsured motorist bodily
injury coverage at
limits that exceed one million dollars ($ 1,000,000)
per person and one million dollars ($ 1,000,000)
per accident.
They represent (in the $ thousands) your
liability limits for
per - person bodily
injury, bodily
injury for all persons injured in any one accident, and property damage
liability.
Arizona's financial responsibility law requires that every driver carry at least minimum insurance
limits of $ 15,000
per person and $ 30,000
per accident bodily
injury liability and $ 10,000
per accident property damage
liability.
The basic coverage in Missouri includes bodily
injury liability ($ 25,000
per person up to $ 50,000) and property damage protection ($ 10,000); however, you might also want to look into higher
limits as well as extras such as personal
injury protection, collision coverage, comprehensive coverage and uninsured / underinsured motorist coverage.
The law requires that an owner whose vehicle is involved in a crash and the operator was charged with a moving traffic violation, must have in effect a policy with
limits of $ 10,000 personal
injury protection
per person /
per crash and $ 10,000 property damage
liability per crash (compulsory coverage).
The
limits of such underinsured motorist bodily
injury coverage shall be equal to the highest
limits of bodily
injury liability coverage for any one vehicle insured under the policy; provided, however, that (i) the
limits shall not exceed one million dollars ($ 1,000,000)
per person and one million dollars ($ 1,000,000)
per accident regardless of whether the highest
limits of bodily
injury liability coverage for any one vehicle insured under the policy exceed those
limits, (ii) a named insured may purchase greater or lesser
limits, except that the
limits shall exceed the bodily
injury liability limits required pursuant to subdivision (2) of this subsection, and in no event shall an insurer be required by this subdivision to sell underinsured motorist bodily
injury coverage at
limits that exceed one million dollars ($ 1,000,000)
per person and one million dollars ($ 1,000,000)
per accident, and (iii) the
limits shall be equal to the
limits of uninsured motorist bodily
injury coverage purchased pursuant to subdivision (3) of this subsection.
Bodily
injury liability limits of $ 20,000 for those you injure in an accident, up to $ 40,000
per accident, and property damage
liability of $ 10,000.
Wisconsin actually reduced its
liability insurance requirements recently — cutting the $ 100,000
per person bodily
injury limit to $ 25,000 and the property damage
limit from $ 15,000 to $ 10,000 — and also made formerly mandatory underinsured motorist coverage optional.
Michigan minimum
liability limits are set with bodily
injury at $ 20,000
per person up to $ 40,000 total
per accident.
Liability car insurance — $ 50,000
limit to cover bodily
injury you cause to others in an accident, up to $ 100,000
per accident, with $ 50,000 to pay for damage you cause to another car or property
The required minimum
limits are 25/50/15: $ 25,000
per person and $ 50,000
per car accident of bodily
injury liability and $ 15,000 of property damage
liability.
The basic Kansas insurance plans include bodily
injury liability with a minimum $ 25,000
per injured person up to a total of $ 50,000
per accident as well as property damage
liability with a minimum
limit of $ 10,000.
The insurance industry recommends bodily
injury liability coverage of $ 100,000
per person and $ 300,000
per accident (referred to as 100/300), if you can afford these higher
limits.
Delaware's former minimum
liability requirements of $ 15,000
per person, $ 30,000
per accident for bodily
injury and $ 10,000 for property damage were rather low — only a couple of states had lower minimum bodily
injury limits.
If one person was severely injured, then that individual's medical expenses could easily exceed your
per person
limit of $ 10,000 for bodily
injury liability — meaning you'd be responsible for the excess medical bills your insurance didn't pay.
Averages for the default result on the average rates tool are based on full coverage insurance for a married 40 - year - old male who commutes 12 miles to work each day, with policy
limits of 100 / 300/100 ($ 100,000 for
injury liability per person, $ 300,000
per accident and $ 100,000 for property damage in an accident) and a $ 500 deductible on collision and comprehensive coverage.
The minimum bodily
injury liability insurance
limits in California
per accident are $ 15,000 of coverage for death or
injury to one person and $ 30,000 of coverage for death or
injury to more than one person.
California's
liability limits include three parts: a
per - person
injury limit, a
per - accident
limit and a property damage
limit.
A Missouri car insurance policy must include bodily
injury liability limits of at least $ 25,000
per person and $ 50,000
per accident.
Bodily
injury liability limits of $ 30,000
per person for those you injure in an accident ($ 60,000
per accident) and property damage
liability of $ 10,000.
Nevada requires that all drivers maintain
liability limits of at least $ 15,000
per person, $ 30,000
per accident for bodily
injury and $ 10,000 property damage.
For example, an auto
liability insurance policy may cover up to $ 25,000
per person, with a
per accident upper -
limit of $ 50,000 in bodily
injury protection.
Uninsured / Underinsured Motorist Bodily
Injury (UM / UIMBI): minimum
limits of 25/50
per accident, but can never be higher than your bodily
injury liability limit.
We recommend
limits of $ 100,000
per person and $ 300,000
per incident for bodily
injury liability and $ 100,000
per incident for property damage
liability coverage (written as 100 / 300/100 in a policy).
The 25/50/15 stands for a $ 25,000
limit for bodily
injury liability per injured person, up to a total of $ 50,000
per accident, and a $ 15,000
limit for property damage
liability.