United States | Crashing truths

Why car insurance in America is actually too cheap

Prices are rising, but most drivers still have paltry coverage

An aerial view of traffic along a highway surrounded by snow in Virginia.
Road-trip hazardImage: Getty Images
|Chicago

In 2010, Eric DuBarry and his two-year-old son Seamus were crossing a street in Portland, Oregon, when an elderly driver mistook the accelerator for the brake, and ploughed into the pair and another man. They were flung across the street—the pram wrapping itself around a lamppost. In hospital that evening, Michelle DuBarry, Seamus’s mother, recalls “this realisation of, my God, how are we going to pay for this?” The day after the crash, Seamus died. The hospital charged the couple’s insurance $180,000 for his care. The DuBarrys had to raise $4,500 of that themselves; and had no coverage for the time off work they had to take. Ms DuBarry thought that at least the driver’s car insurance would pay for some of those costs.

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This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Crashing truths”

From the January 20th 2024 edition

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