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Insurance Deductible Calculator

Calculate the break-even point to decide if you should switch to a high deductible auto insurance plan to save on premiums.

Direct Answer

If you have enough emergency savings to cover the higher deductible, it usually pays off to take the high deductible and pocket the premium savings.

Option A (Low Deductible)

Option B (High Deductible)

Break-Even Analysis

Annual Premium Savings
$150
($13 / month)
Extra Out-of-Pocket Risk
$500
if you file a claim
Time to Break Even
40.0 Months
without filing a claim

Stick with the low deductible. It takes too long (over 3 years) to break even on the premium savings.

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Step by step

How to use this tool

  1. 1

    Get two quotes from your insurer: one with a $500 deductible and one with a $1,000 deductible (or your current vs proposed amounts).

  2. 2

    Enter the monthly or annual premium for each option.

  3. 3

    Enter each deductible amount.

  4. 4

    Review the break-even period. If you can go that many months without a claim, the higher deductible saves money. If you tend to file 1+ claims per year, keep the lower deductible.

Decision context

What this calculator helps you decide

Use Insurance Deductible Calculator when you need a quick, structured answer before you spend money, approve work, prepare a trip, compare options, or share information with a buyer, seller, shop, lender, or insurer. Enter the inputs you already know, review the result, then use the assumptions and limits below to decide what to check next.

Inputs and outputs

Start with the inputs that most affect this decision: Low Deductible Cost, Low Deductible Premium, High Deductible Cost, High Deductible Premium. The output is meant to make the next step easier to compare, not to replace a written quote, inspection, policy document, loan disclosure, or local rule.

The main outputs are Monthly Premium Savings, Increased Out-of-Pocket Risk, Months to Break Even. If one input is uncertain, change that value and compare the result again before treating a single estimate as final.

Best-use cases

This page is built around the search intent: calculate insurance deductible break-even, high or low deductible car insurance, should I raise my deductible. It is most useful when you want to narrow a decision, prepare better questions, or avoid missing a cost, risk, fitment issue, paperwork step, or ownership detail.

Keep the assumptions visible while using the result. If your vehicle, location, driving pattern, quote, loan, insurance policy, or listing situation is unusual, use this as a planning screen and verify the final decision with the relevant document, professional, or local requirement.

Real scenarios

Example calculations

$500 vs $1,000 Deductible

Comparing a low and high deductible on a standard sedan policy.

Inputs

Low Deductible$500
Low Premium$180/mo
High Deductible$1,000
High Premium$145/mo

Results

Monthly Savings$35
Added Risk$500
Break Even14.3 months

$250 vs $1,000 Deductible

A bigger deductible jump with higher premium savings.

Inputs

Low Deductible$250
Low Premium$210/mo
High Deductible$1,000
High Premium$155/mo

Results

Monthly Savings$55
Added Risk$750
Break Even13.6 months

Assumptions we made

  • You do not get into an at-fault accident before the break-even point

Important limitations

  • Does not account for comprehensive claims (like hail) which may have a separate deductible

Methodology

How the estimate works

Inputs, outputs, and calculation logic.

Logic

Divides the increased out-of-pocket risk by the monthly premium savings to find the break-even duration

Inputs

  • Low Deductible Cost
  • Low Deductible Premium
  • High Deductible Cost
  • High Deductible Premium

Outputs

  • Monthly Premium Savings
  • Increased Out-of-Pocket Risk
  • Months to Break Even

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Is a higher deductible always better?

Only if you can afford to pay it out of pocket after an accident and you do not expect to file frequent claims. The break-even calculation tells you exactly how long you need to go claim-free for the savings to pay off.

Does my deductible affect my premium a lot?

Typically, going from a $500 to a $1,000 deductible saves 15-30% on your collision and comprehensive premium. The exact savings depend on your insurer, vehicle, and claims history.

Do I pay the deductible if the other driver is at fault?

Usually no, if the other driver's insurance accepts liability. But if you file through your own collision coverage first, you pay your deductible upfront and get reimbursed later through subrogation.

Should I keep a lower deductible on an older car?

Not necessarily. On an older car worth $5,000, a $1,000 deductible means the insurer only pays $4,000 max. Consider whether the premium savings over 2-3 years exceed that payout difference.

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