Auto Insurance: A Plain-English Buyer's Guide
If you are shopping auto insurance for the first time (or the first time in years), this is the no-jargon guide we wish every client had before quoting.
Auto insurance is one of those purchases that most drivers and families make once and then never look at again. That is a mistake. Here is the buyer's guide we walk new clients through before we even open a quote system.
Step 1: Know what you are insuring
Before you compare premiums, you need a clear picture of the asset, the operation, or the people you are protecting. For Alabama, Tennessee, and Mississippi drivers, this usually means listing every covered item, every relevant value, and every exposure that auto insurance is meant to address.
Step 2: Pick the right limits, not the lowest premium
Limit-shopping is the most expensive way to buy auto insurance. The right starting point is "what is the worst realistic loss this policy will be asked to handle?" — usually an at-fault crash that exceeds your liability limits — and then setting limits a comfortable margin above it.
Step 3: Decide on deductibles strategically
Deductibles are a price lever, not a coverage lever. We typically recommend the highest deductible you can absorb in a single claim without disrupting your finances. For most drivers and families, that lands somewhere between $1,000 and $5,000 depending on the line.
Step 4: Add only the endorsements that match your real risks
OEM parts endorsement and rideshare gap coverage are usually the two highest-value endorsements on a auto insurance policy. Most others are situational. We help you pick the ones that earn their cost on your specific risk.
Step 5: Shop multiple carriers, not just multiple quotes from one
Real auto insurance comparison means at least three different carriers — not three quotes from the same direct writer at different deductibles. Miller Insurance Agency shops Progressive, Safeco, and Travelers and 20+ more in one sitting.
Want this looked at on your specific policy?
We'll re-shop your coverage at no charge — no obligation, no pressure.