tunce wrote:
Tyler0215 wrote:
Drop the insurance. A 12 year old TT is probably only worth $2000 max if they total it. Save your insurance money and take the loss.
I have no idea who you have insurance through, but my insurance company treats it like a house. They will pay today's value to replace it, if it were to be totaled. If I want 26k coverage they will pay 26k no questions asked, if totaled, to replace it. I had an 11 year old trailer and it was still worth retail 11K, got close to 9K on trade. I pay $231 per year with a $500 deductible. When I just trading in this past week the RV dealer told me to stay clear of Progressive as they are awful with RV's and have no idea what goes into fixing one.
Tyler has it correct.
In your case you "traded" a UNDAMAGED 11 yr old trailer into a dealer, dealers play "games" with numbers on paper. They can make ANYTHING "look" like you got $11K but in reality you got at the best $4K as a trade.. That dealer most likely put in on the lot asking $11K and sold it for $6K-$8K..
If you would have tried trading in a physically damaged trailer you wouldn't have gotten $11K..
Insurance company most likely will SCRAP a 12yr old trailer like the OP has, they will "give" you SCRAP PRICING, not "replacement".. Big difference between scrap and replacement.. and even IF they gave "replacement" pricing at 12yrs old they might get $4K-$5K (market value of a 12 yr old trailer) and that would include the deductible.
For the money spent on the insurance over the life of the trailer you will have paid in nearly what you bought it for and see nothing in return.
Dropping unneeded insurance on a 12 yr old trailer can save you some money and if you are scared about possible "loss" due to theft, fire or accident you can simply take the money you WOULD have been paying to an insurance company and put it into a SAVINGS ACCOUNT.
After several years you WILL have a "down payment" in CASH for a replacement trailer.
Over the years we HAVE been "programmed" to believe everything we own MUST be insured, in some cases rightly so (like a APPRECIATING ASSET as in a home).. We over insure now days and don't blink twice at it..
You SHOULD always be evaluating your REAL insurance needs, reducing it in places and increasing only where needed.