Car Insurance Coverage for Pets in Car Accidents
Car Insurance Coverage for Pets in Car Accidents
Pets ride in cars all the time, but what if they’re injured in a car accident? Whose car insurance company pays to treat their injuries? The answer depends on the cause of the accident.
Riding in cars can be dangerous for pets (as well as distracting to the driver), especially because they ride without the benefit of seat belts. If someone crashes into you and causes injuries to your pet, you’re entitled to make a “third-party claim” with their car insurance company for your pet’s medical bills. That’s because their liability car insurance policy must put you “back where you were” before the accident.
If you are at-fault in a car accident in which your pet is injured, you’ll want to check your car insurance policy for exclusions. Say you crash into another car or a fence: Collision insurance pays for the repairs to your own vehicle. But you may have an exclusion on your collision insurance coverage for damage to personal property that you are transporting, whether it’s your antique vase or your pet. If your car insurance policy has such exclusions, you won’t have a valid claim. For example, State Farm says that its policies don’t provide coverage for pet injuries. Car insurance coverage may vary depending on the car insurance company, so be sure to carefully check your policy.
In this scenario, if you don’t carry collision coverage at all, you must pay for all damage from the accident, including your car and pet.
Perhaps someone comes to visit you and your dog goes to lie down under their car. Then, unknowingly, the visitor backs over your pet. Is the visitor liable for your dog’s injuries? Yes, he is, but not under the bodily injury section of his car insurance policy. Bodily injury pays out for injuries sustained by any “one person” in an accident. Your pet doesn’t qualify as a person so he’s not covered by this portion of the car insurance policy policy.
However, for car insurance purposes, your pet qualifies as your “personal property,” and you have the right to be “put back where you were” before the accident
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