Here's the deal: the second you sign the dotted line for a new car the value drops 20%. The same time next year, the value plunges another 10 - 15%. This goes on for another two years, then the value levels off somewhat but still continues to drop. Should the unthinkable occur, such as a collision or fire/flood that totals your vehicle, you are left owing the remainder of the actual cash value and what you owe to the leinholder. This could be thousands and thousands of dollars. GAP will cover this amount owed, so if you are dumb enough (just kidding) to purchase a new car then GAP is a must.
2006-11-26 05:07:56
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Gap insurance is for when you are financing your car for more than the car is actually valued for. If you trade in a used car that you still have an outstanding loan on and the trade in value is less than the loan amount, you will have to make up the difference. Most people do this by adding the difference on the old car loan onto the amount they are requesting for the new loan.
When you insure your car, the insurer is only going to insure the actual value of the car, not the value of the loan. So, if you total your car, the insurance pays for the car's value, but you would be stuck for the "gap" between the value of the car and the amount left on the loan.
You should not buy it if there is no gap to begin with (no trade in).
After that, I'd probably buy it if I had a large gap, but not a small one.
2006-11-25 22:02:14
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answer #2
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answered by Answer 3
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1
2016-09-24 20:30:20
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answer #3
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answered by ? 3
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Well, if you're not putting anything down, or your down payment is small that's one reason to need it. The more you finance, of course the more you owe, but when the car depreciates and the loan is still so much you will probably need it. If you have a high interest rate along with that, there's another reason. If you were to have an accident right after you bought it, you'd probably be ok, but in some situations if your car is totaled, the actual cash value is less than what you owe. Then you're "upside down" on the loan. It's not a bad idea to have it if you are concerned about that. It is happening more and more these days. And insurance companies don't pay off your loan for you just to be nice- and your lien holder won't write off what you owe them since the insurance won't pay it all, just to be nice!
2006-11-26 01:09:03
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answer #4
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answered by Chris 5
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Gap protects the lender. If you happen to have a serious accident that totals your vehicle, insurance will only pay the value of the vehicle, not the amount you have financed. If the value won't pay off the loan, you are responsible to keep making payments until the loan is fully paid. With gap insurance, the lender is paid the difference between the value of the vehicle at the time of loss and the amount of pay off left on the loan. If you are upside down in your loan, it's a good idea. Do the math for your situation and decide.
2006-11-26 00:33:20
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answer #5
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answered by oklatom 7
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first of all, I strongly propose hollow coverage - in spite of your perceived utilising skills and the alarms. autos with alarms get stolen every day. solid drivers get in undesirable accidetns every day. you will possibly be a 5-megastar driving force, yet that moron on his cellular telephone arising in the back of you on the stoplight isn't. whilst he slams into you and totalds this factor out, your utilising checklist isnt going to pay the charges. I also have a solid chum who exchange into in merely that state of affairs. He wound up with a totaled automobile, and a $9000 invoice for the version between the inner maximum loan payoff and the coverage settlement. He paid on a automobile he did nto own for almost a three hundred and sixty 5 days until eventually now he could get into yet another automobile. That suggested, hollow is obtainable from maximum coverage distributors. verify with yours to work out in the event that they furnish it. in the event that they do, its in all hazard extra low-priced than the single you obtain. Now, concerning the broking. If the contracts have already been authorized and submitted to the financial company, the broking is out of the loop on the hollow insurnace. Now its between you and the underwriter of the coverage. you will choose to touch them promptly and cancel, they preserve on with the refund directly to the inner maximum loan stability. If the contracts are no longer submitted, the broking can rewrite them and resubmit to the financial company. although, they do no longer look to be required to try this. If the broking is uncooperative, jsut wait some days, then take the stairs I recommended first - contacting the underwriter promptly.
2016-10-04 09:19:47
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answer #6
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answered by ? 4
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this is especially important when leasing a car
2006-11-27 20:29:40
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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