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Umbrella Insurance Covers What Your Other Policies Don’t

shieldAndrew Schrage calendar_todayJun 09, 2026 updateUpdated Jun 11, 2026 schedule4 min read verifiedFact-checked
Umbrella Insurance Covers What Your Other Policies Don’t
Just the Tip:

If someone sues you for an amount exceeding your auto or homeowners liability coverage, you pay the difference out of pocket. A personal umbrella policy typically provides $1 million in additional coverage for $200-400 a year and fills that gap. Add one if you have assets worth protecting or significant earning potential.

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Most people assume the liability limits on their auto and home policies are enough to cover a worst-case lawsuit. A serious at-fault accident or an injury on your property can run past those limits fast, and once it does, your savings, your home equity, and even your future paychecks are fair game.

Umbrella coverage is built for that situation, and it is not just for the wealthy. Courts can garnish future wages to satisfy a judgment, so a young high earner with little saved today can have as much at stake as someone with a paid-off house. The policy also reaches beyond car and home claims to cover things like libel, slander, and injuries your dog causes away from home.

Picture causing a multi-car highway accident where two people are seriously hurt. Damages and lost wages climb past $1 million. Your auto policy caps out at $250,000, and you owe the rest. An umbrella policy absorbs that difference and often covers your legal defense too.

Before an insurer sells you a policy, it usually requires you to carry minimum liability limits on your underlying auto and home coverage, often around $250,000 to $300,000. Match your total coverage to what you would need to protect. Count both your current assets and the income a court could come after. Most insurers stack umbrella protection over policies you already hold with them, so start by asking your current carrier for a quote and a bundling discount. Each additional million in coverage typically adds only $75 to $150 a year.

Add up your net worth plus a few years of income. Buy at least that much. The one year you need it pays for decades of premiums.

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Originally published at moneycrashers.com.

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Written & reviewed by

Andrew Schrage

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