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All over the world, you need car insurance that covers the damages you do to others. In Austria and Germany, this insurance has to cover at least 7 790 000 € of damages. Isn't it a bit high?

This Canadian blog explains that coverage of 1 000 000 CAD (741 212 €) is not enough, especially if you cripple someone. I agree, but I don't see any reason to go as high as almost 8 million.

What do things look like in the US, a country of the dreaded 'medical bill'? Shockingly, this website recommends a coverage of $ 300 000 (284 950 €).

It is hard for me to imagine an accident where you would do more than 10 million € of damages. Perhaps seriously injuring 5 or more people, or crash-blocking the only fire exit in a burning building. Maybe crashing into the Louvre and T-boning the Mona Lisa.

Let us look at how often such freak accidents happen. I wasn't able to find any other data than the difference in insurance premiums.

The difference in premiums for a 7 790 000 € coverage and 15 000 000 € coverage for a new driver is about 1 € per month or 12 € per year. The additional claim to be paid by the insurance company lies between 0 and 7 210 000 €. Let's make it 3 million €. For an insurance company to break even, the probability of such a freak accident would have to be 4 in a million per car-year. In Germany, there are about 50 million insured vehicles. That is, to break even there cannot be more than 200 such freak accidents per year. But are there any such accidents at all? I wasn't able to find the data.

Is this all a scheme to get a few more pennies on premiums, or are there any cases when such high coverage is justified?

Martin Drozdik
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I think you underestimate the costs of being found liable in an accident where someone is killed or seriously injured. You may be held responsible for the lifetime cost of care of someone on a ventilator, including their lost wages. As a financial advisor once said to me: "You want to know how bad it can be? Imagine being found at fault for an injury accident involving a car full of neurosurgeons". I can't speak to Europe, but in California in 2020 there were six lawsuits involving wrongful death in car accidents that settled for between $3,000,000 and $14,000,000 USD.

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It sounds perfectly reasonable to me, and I don't know why some countries allow people to drive with such low policy limits, when payouts for permanent life-changing injuries can be so high.

Here in the UK, I have a normal motor insurance policy. It has limits on how much I can claim if I cause an accident, but has no limit on payouts to third parties.

Simon B
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In the Great Heck rail accident in the UK on 28 February 2001, a driver, Gary Hart, fell asleep at the wheel. His car (a Land Rover) went off the motorway (freeway), through a fence, down an embankment, and came to rest with the front half on one track of a double-track high speed railway line. While he was using his mobile phone to speak to the emergency services, a passenger train hit the Land Rover, shearing off the front half. The train's leading car then derailed to the right so as to partly overhang the adjacent running line (for trains coming in the opposite direction).

The train travelled another 2000 feet like that, then collided with a freight train (carrying coal) coming in the opposite direction on the adjacent track. The closing speed of the trains has been estimated at 180 mph. Both train drivers and eight passengers died. Many more were injured and some will require lifelong care. Both trains were extensively damaged, as was a lot of track, and several hundred tons of coal spilled. One locomotive was destroyed. Hart was prosecuted and sentenced to five years in prison for causing death by dangerous driving.

By 2003 Hart's insurers had paid out 22 million UK pounds. By 2012 the total was said to be possibly 50 million, and to be 'the largest ever payout for a motor accident in the UK'.

2012 newspaper story about payout

2021 article about crash

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Michael Harvey
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"Why is the mandated minimal liability car insurance coverage so high"

I think the main reason is if the 'at fault' party has insufficient insurance and assets to cover the damages the taxpayer may be on the hook to provide for the injured party, even if they are not made whole. For example, a young person can never work again and requires 24/7 medical care.

It also should not be particularly expensive since such accidents are rare for any individual driver, so the incremental cost of the higher coverage should not be high (and competition should ensure that it is not inflated if it's required for all).

So it's deemed to be valuable and deemed to be affordable- so the government mandates it. That's more-or-less the accepted job of governments.

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In the USA: The limits are not arbitrary limits. Actuaries actually work out the risk of loss over large historical periods based upon state, county, age, gender, frequency, and severity. Legal costs can be HUGE, and this is all priced into the costs. It is not based upon 1 or 100 incidents. It is based upon the expected loss to the insurance companies, and of course, most importantly, to the individuals, whos loss is often their life. These numbers are used by state regulators to specify minimum levels of coverage; to afford at least some minimum insurance protection, and to spread out the cost over a large group of insurance holders.

Ralph Winters
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All over the world, you need car insurance that covers the damages you do to others. In Austria and Germany, this insurance has to cover at least 7 790 000 € of damages. Isn't it a bit high?

Car insurance requirements are this high because the government doesn't want to pay for damages out of the tax payer budget. If you get into a car accident and the insurance is too law, the following scenarios are possible:

  1. You have enough assets available to cover everything out of pocket => taxpayers are good.
  2. You have enough assets, but choose to cash them out and escape the country => taxpayers have to pay for treatment/support for the persons injured, plus pay the police to chase you down.
  3. You don't have enough assets, declare bankruptcy => the government now has to pay for treatment/support, plus they've got another bankrupt citizen on their hands. They can send you to jail but that's even more money spent on the mess.
  4. You don't have enough assets, your wages are garnished for life => the government might still have to cover the difference over the years, plus they have a disgruntled taxpayer who barely has an incentive to work harder as most of their wages disappear anyway.

So the easiest solution is introduce high requirements for liability insurance and let individual drivers pay for the potential risks out of their own pocket. In the US the limits are much lower because most voters have to drive to get anywhere, so they don't support restrictive insurance policies. In Germany most people can get around on foot / bike / public transit, so voters are more lenient on strict requirements.

JonathanReez
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We had elective law in high school. The teacher, a judge, was good, I'm still profiting from it. One of the takeaways, derived from his daily practice: Get liability insurance as high as you can, ideally unlimited. You want to be insured against what would ruin you.

He had seen many lives ruined.

On the other end, it is pointless to insure against damages that you can pay for out-of-pocket: As with any insurance you lose money on average, but without benefit.

The picture that emerges is about the opposite of your question: Why on earth are American drivers allowed to drive with this ridiculously low coverage? Many of them could pay $50,000 (a typical minimum amount) out-of-pocket, and some states acknowledge that, offering the possibility to self-insure.

With minimum policies even relatively wealthy drivers, and worse: their victims, are not protected against truly catastrophic events, the kind that you actually need protection against.

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Don’t forget: if an risk is extremely unlikely to happen, even if the damage done by the amount is high, insurance against that risk is not expensive.

Imagine that one policyholder in one million will have a $3 million loss each year. The actuarial cost of that insurance is... $3 a year.

I assume that the actual likelihood of loss drops off by the power law, so past a certain point it matters less and less where the limit is.

Michael Lorton
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In the US there exists an issues with underinsured motorists and illegals not having any insurance. Illegal aliens in some states(NY) can now obtain state driver's licenses and purchase insurance.

Auto insurance provides option to purchase additional SUM coverage (supplemental underinsured motorist). This allows for your own insurance to pay you when someone else causes you bodily harm that they do not have the means or insurance to pay for. This also means that you are paying for other peoples negligence.

paulj
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In my state (Pennsylvania, United States) one might ask why the mandatory limit is so low:

You are in compliance with the law if you have liability insurance in the following amounts: $15,000 for injury or death of one person in an accident $30,000 for injury or death of more than one person in an accident $5,000 for damage to property of another person

As to the reason any law is set the way it is, is a political question.

user662852
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