Thank you for the advice I did look into it more and what I really wanted it to cover was my rims because I hit curbs all the time lol it doesn’t really cover that kind of damage so that’s out for sure. Still up in the air about the gap insurance. We once bought my son a new car and he totaled it in 8 months the depreciation was crazy and we were out thousands of dollars. I don’t remember all the details there was only a small loan and we had put a lot of cash on it. They gave us at least 6 thousand less than what we paid . I am not sure how it works exactly so I will do some more research .Tire/rim insurance is seldom "worth it" as the amount paid in premiums is, by definition, more than the amount paid out in claims - if it wasn't so they wouldn't make any money on it and they wouldn't be pushing so hard to sell it. In fact, given that this is one of the high-profit-margin items typically sold at the last-minute during vehicle closing when your guard is down (with around 50% of the policy value going directly to the dealership as pure profit), the amount paid in claims is usually MUCH lower than the premium costs. Bottom line: You're better off keeping the premiums in your pocket and taking the risk. That being said, insurance does buy peace of mind and if you're going to lose sleep worrying about the cost of replacing a wheel, then maybe it is worth it to you to get as good night's sleep.
Gap insurance is something to consider if you're significantly "underwater" in your loan/lease and paying off the difference if the car is totalled would be be a financial hardship. Here again, you're really better off just not being underwater to begin with even if this means getting less car or putting more money down.
Prices for these sorts of things are "whatever they think you'll pay" and are negotiated. Negotiate hard as they're high profit items. You don't necessarily even have to buy this sort of insurance at the time you buy the car - you can usually shop around later and get competing bids.
- Mark
Thank you for the advice I did look into it more and what I really wanted it to cover was my rims because I hit curbs all the time lol it doesn’t really cover that kind of damage so that’s out for sure. Still up in the air about the gap insurance. We once bought my son a new car and he totaled it in 8 months the depreciation was crazy and we were out thousands of dollars. I don’t remember all the details there was only a small loan and we had put a lot of cash on it. They gave us at least 6 thousand less than what we paid . I am not sure how it works exactly so I will do some more research .
Absolutely! Luckily I will not be one of those people. I am paying msrp though and not putting much down this will be my first purchase in many years so unfortunately I don’t have a trade in. If that were to happen of course I would be able to afford the loss but who wants to lose the money. In our case with our son the loan was paid off but we were out a large chunk of cash. Insurance companies dictate what the car is worth at time of accident. New cars take the biggest hits if it were a used car I don t think it would make a big difference. Anyway yes I called my insurance guy with the vin so he can make the changes and asked him to look into the cost of gap today. I am heading to pick up my sxp copper black with dune interior! So excited!Stacy’s-
Your story should be a cautionary tale to the forum members paying the crazy “market rate adjustment” prices. If 10 months into their loan and total the new Telluride, the ugly reality of depreciation would leave many buyers in a very unfortunate situation.