Thursday, April 16, 2020
Uber What Insurance Do Ride Share Drivers Need
Uber What Insurance Do Ride Share Drivers Need In 2014, Uber and Lyft rolled out expanded liability insurance for a rapidly growing fleet of independent drivers. For riders, the implication was clear: if youâre injured during a trip with a ride hailing service, the damages will be covered â" up to $1 million. If youâre a civilian driver who has collided with an Uber or Lyft, youâll navigate the claims process as you normally would. But if youâre a ride share driver, things arenât that simple. The two companiesâ collision insurance comes with a steep deductible and doesnât cover every situation. Worse, if your personal insurer learns you work for a car-hailing app, they can drop you from your plan. Confused? Youâre not the only one. If youâre a ride share driver, or thinking of becoming one, hereâs what you need to know about insurance. 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On New Yearâs Eve, a six-year-old girl was struck and killed by an Uber driver in San Francisco, and the company tried to distance itself from the incident. The driver wasnât carrying a passenger, and wasnât en route to one, so Uber claimed no responsibility. The family sued, and lawmakers pushed for greater insurance requirements for ride sharing companies. Shortly after, Uber and its competitors expanded their policies to include between-ride accidents. Itâs a positive step, but the expanded policies donât give drivers full coverage. Today, there are three tiers that Uber and Lyft use for determining liability: Period 1: Driver has the app âonâ and is waiting for a request. The companies provide no collision coverage during this stage, and limited liability coverage â" up to $50,00 for bodily injury with a total of $100,000 per accident. Period 2: Driver has app âonâ and has accepted a request or is on the way to a pick up a passenger. Uber and Lyft provide both liability and collision coverage during this stage. Collision insurance comes with a $1,000 deductible for Uber, and a $2,500 deductible for Lyft. Period 3: Driver has a passenger in the car. Uber and Lyft assume the same liability and collision coverage as period 2. Uberâs and Lyftâs insurance usually kicks in when a driverâs personal auto insurance fails to cover the damages. A driverâs insurer is likely to fight the charges, so this happens often â" and can end with the driver losing his or her personal policy, says Harry Campbell, an L.A.-based ride share driver and the blogger behind âThe Rideshare Guy.â âIf you get into an accident in California, one of the first questions your insurer asks you is âAre you an Uber or Lyft driver?ââ Campbell says. âIf you say yes, they can drop you, and if you say no, youâre lying to your insurer.â Ride Share Insurance Uber and Lyft drivers can purchase commercial insurance, but those policies are prohibitively expensive for most people. Conservative estimates range from $3,000 to $5,000 a year, Campbell says. As a result, major insurance carriers have begun offering ride share insurance, which are personal plans that cover drivers during between-trip accidents. Ride share policies are more affordable than their commercial counterparts (most run between $100 and $200 a month) and are available from nearly every major carrier. âA number of insurers are selling this as an endorsement, or a rider, to a policy,â says Peter Kochenburger, associate clinical professor of law at the University of Connecticut and a specialist in insurance and consumer law. âThe idea is to close the gap between a personal policy and Uberâs policy. If you drive and you donât have one of those endorsements, your personal policy wonât be sufficient in an accident.â This sliver of the insurance industry is still very new, so thereâs little competition. Drivers in most states have only one insurance option, and some driversâ"those in Hawaii, Oregon and Idaho, for instanceâ"donât have access to ride share insurance at all. Kochenburger is optimistic that states will soon iron out those wrinkles. âItâs really about coordinating coverage,â he says. âStates are figuring out their ride sharing laws, and setting the appropriate parameters. Once every state figures out what theyâre going to allow, the ability to obtain sufficient insurance as a driver will be much easier.â The Takeaway For drivers whose livelihood depends on Uber and Lyft, particularly those in states without access to third-party insurance, even a fender bender can spell disaster. âIf your car is your money maker, and an accident isnât covered, you lose both your money and your ability to make it back,â Campbell says. âItâs a tough position to be in.â As ride sharing continues to evolve, so will its insurance options. Survey your options before getting in too deep.
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