What Is Full Coverage Insurance in Southlake, TX? A Complete Guide for Drivers

May 15, 2026

If you have ever financed a car, leased a vehicle, or shopped for auto insurance in Southlake, TX, you have almost certainly heard the term full coverage. Your lender requires it. Your agent recommends it. But almost nobody in the insurance industry actually defines it the same way twice, because full coverage is not a specific policy type. It is a shorthand term that means different things depending on who is using it.

For Southlake drivers, understanding what full coverage actually includes, what it leaves out, and when it makes financial sense to carry it is worth getting right before your next renewal. This guide covers all of it, from the core components to the coverage gaps that trip up even experienced drivers.

“Full Coverage” Is Not an Official Policy Type

The first thing to understand is that no insurance carrier offers a product called full coverage. When a lender, a dealer, or an agent uses that phrase, they are typically referring to a policy that combines three distinct coverage types: liability, collision, and comprehensive. Together, those three components cover most of the scenarios a driver is likely to face, which is why the shorthand stuck. But the combination is not standardized, and what one lender calls full coverage may differ from what another requires.

The practical consequence of this is that asking for full coverage without specifying limits and coverage types can leave you with a policy that meets the minimum threshold your lender demands but does not actually reflect the level of protection you need. Working with an independent agent who will walk through each component, explain the limits, and compare options across multiple carriers is the only way to know exactly what you are getting.

What Full Coverage Typically Includes

When most drivers and lenders use the term full coverage, they mean a policy built from these three foundations.

Liability Coverage

Liability is the only coverage Texas actually requires by law. It pays for the other party’s injuries and property damage when you cause an accident. Texas mandates minimums of $30,000 per injured person, $60,000 per accident, and $25,000 for property damage, expressed as 30/60/25. A full coverage policy always includes liability, but the limits can and should be set well above the state minimum for most drivers. The recommended starting point for Southlake drivers is 100/300/100, which triples the state minimum and provides meaningful protection against a serious at-fault accident.

Liability does not cover your own vehicle or your own medical expenses. It covers the other party. Every other component of a full coverage policy fills in what liability leaves unaddressed.

Collision Coverage

Collision pays to repair or replace your own vehicle after an accident, regardless of fault. If you rear-end another car, slide into a guardrail on a wet stretch of FM 1709, or get sideswiped in a Southlake Town Square parking lot, collision is the coverage that pays for your vehicle’s repairs, minus your deductible. If the repair cost exceeds the vehicle’s actual cash value, the insurer declares the vehicle a total loss and pays you the current market value instead.

Collision is optional under Texas law but required by most lenders and lessors. Once your loan is paid off and you own the vehicle outright, you are free to drop it, though whether that is financially wise depends on your vehicle’s value.

Comprehensive Coverage

Comprehensive covers damage to your vehicle from events that are not collisions: theft, fire, vandalism, hail, flooding, falling objects, and animal strikes. In North Texas, comprehensive coverage is particularly relevant. The DFW area experiences some of the most severe hail seasons in the country, and a single storm can total a vehicle parked outside. Vehicle theft is also a consistent concern in suburban markets around the metro. Comprehensive coverage addresses both of those risks directly.

Like collision, comprehensive is optional under Texas law and required by lenders. It is generally the less expensive of the two physical damage coverages, which makes it worth keeping even on older vehicles that might not justify collision.

What Full Coverage Does Not Cover

This is where many drivers discover their coverage has gaps they did not expect. Despite its name, full coverage does not protect you from every possible loss. Here is what a standard liability, collision, and comprehensive combination leaves unaddressed.

  • Your own medical expenses. Liability pays the other driver’s medical bills when you are at fault. Collision and comprehensive cover your vehicle. Neither pays for your own treatment or your passengers’ medical care after an accident. Personal injury protection and medical payments coverage fill this gap.
  • Damage caused by uninsured or underinsured drivers. If an uninsured driver hits you and totals your vehicle, you can file a collision claim, but you will pay your deductible. Uninsured motorist coverage handles situations where the at-fault driver cannot pay, and underinsured motorist coverage applies when their limits are too low to cover your losses.
  • The gap between your loan balance and your vehicle’s actual cash value. If your car is totaled and your loan balance is higher than what the vehicle is currently worth, your collision coverage only pays the actual cash value. You are still responsible for the difference. GAP insurance covers that shortfall and is worth considering on any financed vehicle in its first few years.
  • Rental car costs while your vehicle is in the shop. Collision and comprehensive pay for repairs, not for transportation while repairs are underway. Rental reimbursement coverage is an add-on that addresses this directly, and it is inexpensive relative to what a week of rental costs out of pocket.
  • Mechanical breakdowns and normal wear and tear. Auto insurance covers sudden, accidental losses. It does not cover engine failures, transmission problems, or parts that wear out over time. Those fall under an extended warranty or service contract, not your insurance policy.

How Much Does Full Coverage Cost in Texas?

How Much Does Full Coverage Cost in Texas?

Texas drivers pay more for auto insurance than the national average. The state’s size, its four major metro areas, frequent severe weather, and meaningful percentage of uninsured drivers all factor into carrier pricing. Statewide, full coverage auto insurance averages roughly $170 to $220 per month, or approximately $2,040 to $2,650 per year, depending on the data source and driver profile used.

Minimum liability coverage, by contrast, averages around $52 to $77 per month statewide. The gap between minimum and full coverage in Texas is real, but so is the gap in protection. A single at-fault accident that totals your vehicle and produces significant medical bills can cost far more than the difference in premiums accumulated over years of carrying full coverage.

For Southlake drivers specifically, the suburban DFW context generally produces rates closer to or below the state average compared to dense urban areas like Dallas proper or Houston. But the vehicles driven in Southlake tend to be newer and higher-value, which raises the cost of collision and comprehensive coverage since they pay based on actual cash value. A driver in Southlake insuring a newer luxury SUV will pay considerably more than a statewide average built around a mid-range sedan.

What Drives Your Full Coverage Premium

No two drivers pay the same rate, even for identical coverage. Several factors feed into how carriers calculate your individual premium.

Your Driving Record

A clean record is the single most powerful driver of a favorable rate. An at-fault accident can raise your premium by 40 to 65 percent at renewal, and a DUI can push it significantly higher. Speeding tickets typically add 20 to 30 percent. Conversely, multiple consecutive years without a claim or violation often unlock good driver discounts that reduce the base rate meaningfully.

Your Vehicle

The make, model, year, and value of what you drive affects every physical damage coverage you carry. More expensive vehicles cost more to repair and replace, which raises collision and comprehensive premiums. Vehicles with higher theft rates carry higher comprehensive costs. Safety ratings and driver assistance technology can lower rates with some carriers, though those same technology features can raise repair costs when sensors and cameras need replacement after a collision.

Your Deductibles

Your collision and comprehensive deductibles are the amounts you pay out of pocket before coverage applies. Choosing a higher deductible, such as $1,000 instead of $500, lowers your monthly premium but raises what you owe after a claim. The right deductible is the highest amount you could comfortably pay without financial disruption if an accident happened tomorrow. Setting it higher than you can realistically absorb to save a few dollars per month defeats the financial purpose of carrying coverage.

Your Credit Score

Texas allows insurers to use credit-based insurance scores when setting auto premiums. Drivers with stronger credit profiles generally receive lower rates. Poor credit can raise a full coverage premium by hundreds of dollars per year compared to an identical driver with excellent credit. This is one reason why improving your credit before shopping for a new policy can produce meaningful rate reductions.

Your Coverage Limits

Higher liability limits cost more than minimum limits, but the increase is often smaller than drivers expect. Moving from 30/60/25 to 100/300/100 on liability typically adds a fraction of what the total full coverage premium costs, while providing dramatically more protection in a serious at-fault accident. For Southlake drivers who own a home and have accumulated assets, carrying higher liability limits is one of the most cost-effective risk management decisions available.

When Full Coverage Makes Sense and When It Does Not

Full coverage is not the right answer for every vehicle or every driver. The decision comes down to the relationship between what you pay and what you would actually recover.

Full coverage makes strong financial sense when your vehicle is financed or leased, since your lender requires it as a loan condition. It also makes sense when your vehicle is newer or high-value, because the cost to repair or replace it justifies the premium. And it makes sense when you could not absorb the cost of a major repair or total loss out of pocket without significant financial hardship.

The math starts to shift when a vehicle has depreciated significantly. A general guideline many agents apply: if the combined annual cost of collision and comprehensive approaches 10 percent of the vehicle’s current market value, it is worth evaluating whether those coverages still make financial sense. On a vehicle worth $6,000, paying $700 per year for physical damage coverage and then facing a $500 to $1,000 deductible on a claim leaves very little net benefit compared to self-insuring that risk.

Drivers who drop physical damage coverage on older vehicles should ensure their liability limits remain high enough to protect their assets. Dropping down to minimum liability along with collision and comprehensive creates meaningful exposure if you cause a serious accident.

How Full Coverage Fits Into Your Broader Insurance Plan

For most Southlake households, auto insurance is one piece of a coordinated protection strategy. Homeowners insurance covers the structure of your home and its contents against fire, storm damage, theft, and liability. If you are renting while searching for a property to buy, renters insurance covers your belongings and personal liability while your landlord’s policy covers the building. If you ride, motorcycle insurance provides dedicated coverage for the specific risks motorcycles carry on DFW roads.

Working with an independent agency gives you access to carriers across all of these product lines, which allows you to compare bundling opportunities, identify gaps between policies, and build a coordinated plan rather than a collection of unrelated policies. Barger & Associates serves drivers and homeowners across North Texas. Visit the areas we serve page to see all the communities we cover in the DFW metro and beyond.

Frequently Asked Questions About Full Coverage Insurance in Southlake, TX

Does Texas require full coverage?

No. Texas law only requires minimum liability coverage of 30/60/25. Full coverage, meaning the addition of collision and comprehensive, is optional under state law. However, if you finance or lease your vehicle, your lender will require both collision and comprehensive as a condition of the loan. Once you own the vehicle outright, the choice is yours.

What is the difference between full coverage and liability only?

Liability only covers damage and injuries you cause to others when you are at fault. It does not cover your own vehicle. Full coverage adds collision, which pays for your vehicle after an accident, and comprehensive, which covers non-collision losses like theft, hail, and fire. Full coverage costs more but provides protection on both sides of the equation.

Is full coverage worth it in Southlake?

For most Southlake drivers with newer or financed vehicles, yes. The area’s vehicle values are above average, hail risk is real throughout North Texas, and the financial exposure from a serious accident without physical damage coverage is substantial. For older paid-off vehicles with lower market values, the calculation is closer and worth reviewing with an agent who can put specific numbers against your vehicle’s current worth.

What deductible should I choose for full coverage?

The most common deductible choices are $500 and $1,000 for both collision and comprehensive. A $1,000 deductible produces a lower premium than a $500 deductible but requires you to pay more after a claim. Choose the highest deductible you could comfortably cover without borrowing or depleting savings. Your deductibles for collision and comprehensive can also be set differently from each other if your carrier allows it.

Does full coverage pay for a rental car?

Not automatically. Collision and comprehensive cover your vehicle’s repairs, not the cost of transportation while those repairs happen. Rental reimbursement is a separate add-on that pays for a rental car, typically up to a daily and total dollar limit, while your vehicle is being repaired after a covered claim. It is worth adding to most full coverage policies given how inexpensive it typically is.

Can I have full coverage on an older car?

Yes, but it may not make financial sense depending on the vehicle’s value. If the vehicle is worth $5,000 to $8,000 and you are paying $700 per year or more for collision and comprehensive with a $500 to $1,000 deductible, the net payout potential is limited. Most agents recommend reviewing the value of your vehicle annually and adjusting coverage accordingly as depreciation reduces what a claim would pay out.

What should I do if I think I am paying too much for full coverage?

Start by reviewing what coverage you actually have against what you need. Then compare quotes from multiple carriers, since pricing for the same driver and vehicle can vary by hundreds of dollars per year between insurers. An independent agent can run those comparisons for you, check for discounts you may not be applying for, and identify whether your current limits and deductibles still make sense for your situation.

About Barger & Associates

Barger & Associates is an independent insurance agency serving drivers, homeowners, and families across Southlake, TX and the broader North Texas area. As an independent agency, we work with multiple carriers rather than a single insurer, which means we compare coverage options across the market and build policies around what you actually need, not a standard package.

We conduct annual policy reviews to make sure your coverage keeps pace with changes in your vehicles, your home, and your financial situation. Whether you are buying your first policy, reviewing a renewal, or questioning whether your current coverage still makes sense, we are here to walk through it with you.

Review Your Auto Coverage with a Southlake Agent

If you are not certain your current policy actually protects you the way you think it does, a coverage review costs nothing. Contact Barger & Associates today by calling (972) 206-1234 or reaching out online. We will walk through your current coverage, compare options across multiple carriers, and make sure your auto insurance is built to protect your vehicle, your finances, and your household on every road in North Texas.