Gary Indiana SR22
Q: I’m financing my car and have full coverage. Is this the amount of coverage I have to have on my Gary IN SR22?
A: While you can drop your full coverage to the minimum and still meet the requirements of your Gary IN SR22 insurance, you have to think about the fact that your financier requires you to have the collision, comprehensive, and gap coverage. If you do drop it, then your car can get repossessed. Coverages that are required for someone who is buying a car include property damage liability, bodily injury liability, comprehensive coverage, collision coverage, and gap insurance.
Even with all of these additional coverages, you can still find ways to save money on your Gary IN SR22 insurance. If you assume more risk–and vow at the same time to be very, very careful on the road-then you can see your car insurance rates plummet. In order to assume more risk, you have to raise the deductibles on your exrta coverages. If you have, say, a $1000 deducible and you get into a car accident involving your car and a tree, you will have to pay the first thousand dollars of damages, and then your car insurance company will take care of the rest. Raising it as high as you can go is best, but make sure you can handle the costs of the deductible.
Indiana SR22
Q: What is Indiana SR22 insurance and what kind of coverage am I required to have for it?
A: Indiana SR22 is mandatory insurance coverage combined with monthly insurance verification. While it is already required by law that everyone who drives carry at least a minimum amount of liability insurance, for those who have had their licenses suspended, an additional requirement is added in the form of the SR22, which is a form which has to be filed every month with the Department of Motor Vehicles by your car insurance company. If not filed, then your license will be suspended. Indiana SR22 is required for three years after the date of the initial suspension.
As for the insurance requirements involved with Indiana SR22, they are otherwise no different than what is required of any Indiana driver. If you have insurance, the minimum amount you can have and still meet the law’s requirements are twenty five thousand dollars of bodily injury per person with a maximum of fifty thousand per accident, and fifteen thousand dollars for property damage coverage. Car insurance companies suggest you get more than that.
