Auto Insurance
What Is GAP Insurance? When It's Worth It for New Cars
By the PolicyZen Team · Updated March 2026 · 7 min read
You drive a brand-new $40,000 car off the lot. Six months later, it's totaled. Your auto insurer pays you the car's current market value — $34,000. But you still owe $39,000 on the loan. You're now $5,000 in debt with no car.
This scenario happens thousands of times per year to people who didn't have GAP insurance.
GAP insurance (Guaranteed Asset Protection) covers the difference between what your auto insurer pays (actual cash value at time of total loss) and what you still owe on your loan or lease. It's not required by law, but lenders often require it — and for new cars with low down payments, it fills a real gap that can cost thousands.
Why the Gap Exists
New cars depreciate approximately 15–20% in the first year and 10–15% each subsequent year. Loan balances don't drop nearly as fast — especially with long loan terms (72–84 months) or low/no down payments. This creates a period — often the first 2–3 years of a new car loan — where you owe significantly more than the car is worth. That's "being underwater" or "upside-down" on the loan.
Example: $45,000 car, $2,000 down, 72-month loan at 6.5%. After 18 months:
Remaining loan balance: ~$40,500
Car's current market value: ~$33,000
Gap: $7,500
Without GAP insurance: you pay $7,500 out of pocket (plus your deductible) after a total loss, before buying a replacement vehicle.
When GAP Insurance Makes Sense
- You put less than 20% down on a new vehicle
- Your loan term is 60 months or longer
- You rolled negative equity from a previous car into the new loan
- You're leasing (most leases require GAP coverage)
- You bought a vehicle that depreciates quickly
When GAP Insurance Isn't Necessary
- You put 20%+ down and have substantial equity
- Your loan balance is already below the car's value
- You're buying a used car with a short payoff timeline
- You could pay the gap out of savings if needed
Where to Buy It (And Where Not To)
Dealerships offer GAP insurance but typically charge $500–$900 (often rolled into your loan, increasing interest costs). Your own auto insurer often offers GAP coverage as an add-on for $20–$40/year — dramatically cheaper. Credit unions and some banks also offer it competitively.
Never buy GAP insurance from a dealership without comparing to your own insurer first. The dealer's price is routinely 5–10x what your insurer charges for the same coverage. Always call your insurance company first.
Does GAP insurance cover my deductible?
Standard GAP insurance does not cover your deductible. Some insurers offer "GAP Plus" or "Loan/Lease Payoff" coverage that includes your deductible (typically up to $1,000). Ask specifically about deductible coverage when shopping.
When should I cancel GAP insurance?
Once your loan balance drops below your car's market value, you no longer need GAP coverage. Check your loan balance vs. current car value (use Kelley Blue Book or Edmunds) periodically. When you're no longer upside-down, cancel it and save the premium.