Personal Insurance

Understanding Insurance Deductibles: How They Work and How to Choose

Reviewed by Kelly McCallister, Client Care Specialist, The Way Agency | Published November 15, 2025 | 5 min read

Your deductible is the amount you pay out of pocket before your insurance kicks in on a claim. Choosing the right deductible is one of the most important decisions you make when setting up your policy, because it directly affects both your premium and your financial exposure when something goes wrong. Here is how deductibles work and how to pick the right one.

What Is a Deductible?

A deductible is your share of a covered loss. If you have a $1,000 deductible on your homeowners policy and a storm causes $8,000 in damage to your roof, you pay the first $1,000 and your insurance covers the remaining $7,000. The deductible applies each time you file a claim, not once per year (unlike health insurance).

Deductibles exist because they eliminate small claims that would cost more to process than they are worth, and they give policyholders a financial stake in preventing losses. In exchange for accepting a higher deductible, you pay a lower premium.

How Higher Deductibles Lower Your Premium

The relationship between deductibles and premiums is straightforward: the more risk you agree to absorb, the less the insurance company charges you. Here is a general idea of how deductible changes affect homeowners premiums:

For auto insurance, the savings follow a similar pattern. Increasing your collision deductible from $250 to $500 usually reduces the collision portion of your premium by 15% to 20%. Moving from $500 to $1,000 saves an additional 10% to 15%.

Flat Deductibles vs. Percentage Deductibles

Most deductibles are flat dollar amounts - $500, $1,000, $2,500. You know exactly how much you will pay if you have a claim. But some coverages use percentage deductibles, which are calculated as a percentage of your dwelling coverage amount.

Percentage deductibles are most common for wind/hail damage and earthquake coverage. If your home is insured for $300,000 and you have a 2% wind/hail deductible, you pay the first $6,000 of any wind or hail claim. That is significantly more than a flat $1,000 deductible, and many homeowners do not realize this until they file a claim.

In Kentucky, many carriers have moved to percentage-based wind/hail deductibles, typically 1% to 2% of the dwelling amount. Check your declarations page to see which type you have. If you see a percentage listed next to wind/hail, multiply it by your dwelling coverage to understand your actual out-of-pocket exposure.

How to Choose the Right Deductible

The right deductible depends on your financial situation and risk tolerance. Ask yourself these questions:

Deductibles and Claims: What to Consider

Before filing a claim, consider whether the payout will be worth it after subtracting your deductible. If you have a $1,000 deductible and $1,500 in damage, you will receive $500 from insurance - but the claim goes on your record and could affect your premium at renewal. For losses that are close to your deductible amount, it may be better to pay out of pocket and keep your claims history clean.

This is another reason a higher deductible can be a smart strategy: it naturally filters out small claims, keeping your record clean and your premiums stable over time.

Frequently Asked Questions

Raising your homeowners deductible from $500 to $1,000 typically saves 8% to 15% on your premium. Going from $1,000 to $2,500 can save an additional 10% to 20%. For auto insurance, increasing your collision deductible from $250 to $500 usually saves 15% to 20% on that coverage. The exact savings vary by carrier and your risk profile.
A percentage deductible is calculated as a percentage of your home's dwelling coverage amount rather than a fixed dollar amount. For example, a 2% deductible on a home insured for $300,000 means you pay the first $6,000 of a covered claim. Percentage deductibles are common for wind/hail damage and earthquake coverage, and they result in a higher out-of-pocket cost than most flat deductibles.
A higher deductible makes sense if you have savings to cover the deductible amount, you rarely file claims, and the premium savings are meaningful. A good rule of thumb: choose the highest deductible you could comfortably pay out of pocket if you had a claim tomorrow. If a $2,500 surprise expense would cause financial stress, a $1,000 deductible is the better choice.

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Last updated: March 2026 | Related coverage: Homeowners, Auto

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