Nevada Minimum Car Insurance Requirements

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    What Car Insurance Does Nevada Require?

    Every registered vehicle in Nevada must carry liability coverage of at least 25,000 dollars for injury to one person, 50,000 dollars for injuries per accident, and 20,000 dollars for property damage.

    That set of limits is written 25/50/20, and it is the legal floor to drive in the state.

    Liability coverage pays other people for the harm you cause. It does nothing for your own injuries when another driver is at fault.

    Nevada's 25/50/20 minimum is modest, and a single serious injury can exhaust it in a day at a trauma center.

    Nevada minimum car insurance attorney

    When the at-fault driver carries only the minimum, your own uninsured and underinsured motorist coverage is often what stands between you and an unpaid hospital bill.

    Knowing what the limits cover, and where they run out, is the difference between a claim that pays your losses and one that leaves you short.

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    What Is the Minimum Car Insurance in Nevada?

    Nevada requires 25/50/20 liability coverage under NRS 485.185.[1] Broken into its three parts, the minimum looks like this:


    • 25,000 dollars bodily injury per person. The most the policy pays for the injuries of any one person hurt in a crash you caused.
    • 50,000 dollars bodily injury per accident. The most the policy pays in total for everyone's injuries in a single crash, regardless of how many people were hurt.
    • 20,000 dollars property damage. The most the policy pays for the other driver's vehicle and other damaged property.

    Nevada also runs an electronic verification system that checks insurance status against registration records. A lapse flags your registration, so the requirement is enforced whether or not you are ever in a crash.

    Nevada minimum coverage falls short serious injury

    Why Nevada's Minimum Limits Often Fall Short

    The 25,000 dollar per-person limit was set for fender-benders, not for the crashes that send people to the hospital. A serious injury blows through it before the math even gets interesting.

    Nevada draws tens of millions of visitors a year, and a large share of the drivers on the Strip and I-15 carry only the state minimum or rent a car on an out-of-state policy. When one of them causes a high-speed crash, the gap between their coverage and your losses becomes your problem to solve.


    Where 25,000 Dollars Disappears

    A single ambulance ride and a trauma admission at University Medical Center, Nevada's only Level I trauma center, can pass the per-person minimum before you are discharged. Add imaging, surgery, and an ICU stay, and the bills climb into six figures within weeks. Air ambulance transport from a rural highway can run tens of thousands of dollars on its own.

    When the at-fault driver's 25,000 dollar limit runs dry, the claim does not end. It shifts to the other policies that can fill the gap, which is exactly why your own coverage choices matter so much.

    Coverage Nevada Does Not Require, but You Should Carry

    The state minimum protects other people from you. These optional coverages protect you and your family, and they are where a real recovery often comes from after a serious crash.


    • Uninsured and underinsured motorist (UM/UIM) coverage. This pays when the at-fault driver has no insurance, flees, or carries limits too low to cover your injuries. Nevada insurers must offer UM/UIM equal to your liability limits, and you have to reject it in writing under NRS 687B.145.[2] Many Nevada drivers carry it without realizing how often it becomes the main source of payment.
    • Stacked coverage. If you insure more than one vehicle, Nevada lets you stack UM/UIM limits across them, which can double or triple what is available after a crash.
    • Medical payments coverage (MedPay). This covers your early medical bills regardless of fault, a useful cushion while liability is sorted out.
    • Higher liability and umbrella limits. Carrying more than the minimum protects your own assets if you cause a serious crash and the 25/50/20 floor is not enough.

    We pursue every one of these layers when the at-fault policy falls short, and our breakdown of uninsured and underinsured motorist claims covers how that recovery is built.

    Penalties for Driving Without Insurance in Nevada

    Driving uninsured in Nevada carries escalating costs that climb with how long the coverage lapsed.


    • Reinstatement fees. Restoring a suspended registration costs a fee that rises with the length of the lapse, on top of any SR-22 requirement.
    • SR-22 filing. After a lapse, Nevada can require an SR-22 certificate of financial responsibility, typically maintained for three years.
    • Registration suspension. The state can suspend your registration until you show valid coverage and pay the reinstatement costs.
    • Personal exposure. An uninsured at-fault driver is personally on the hook for the injuries and property damage they cause, with no policy behind them.

    For the full picture of how coverage layers stack after a Nevada crash, see our Nevada car accident guide.

     

     

    Nevada Car Insurance FAQ

    What is the minimum car insurance required in Nevada?

    Nevada requires 25/50/20 liability coverage under NRS 485.185: 25,000 dollars for bodily injury per person, 50,000 dollars for bodily injury per accident, and 20,000 dollars for property damage. This is the legal floor to register and drive a vehicle in the state.

    Does Nevada require uninsured motorist coverage?

    No, but insurers must offer it. Under NRS 687B.145, a Nevada carrier has to offer uninsured and underinsured motorist coverage equal to your liability limits, and you must reject it in writing to go without it. Because so many drivers carry only the state minimum, UM/UIM coverage is often the most valuable protection on your own policy.

    Is the Nevada minimum enough after a serious crash?

    Often not. A single trauma admission can exceed the 25,000 dollar per-person limit, and air ambulance transport alone can run tens of thousands of dollars. When the at-fault driver carries only the minimum, recovery usually depends on your own UM/UIM coverage, stacked policies, and any other applicable insurance.

    What happens if the driver who hit me had no insurance?

    Your own uninsured motorist coverage becomes the source of recovery. If the at-fault driver was underinsured, your underinsured motorist coverage covers the gap above their limits. Stacked household policies and umbrella coverage can add to what is available. An uninsured at-fault driver is also personally responsible, though that is often hard to collect.

    What is the penalty for driving without insurance in Nevada?

    Nevada can suspend your registration, require a reinstatement fee that grows with the length of the lapse, and require an SR-22 certificate of financial responsibility for about three years. An uninsured driver who causes a crash is also personally liable for the injuries and damage, with no policy to pay the claim.

    Hurt by a Driver Who Carried Only the Minimum?

    Nevada's 25/50/20 minimum was never built to cover a catastrophic injury, and the gap it leaves becomes the injured person's problem at the worst possible time.

    People hurt in a crash deserve a recovery that reflects what the wreck actually cost, not the size of the at-fault driver's thin policy. The trial lawyers at Lawsuit Legal map every available coverage layer, from the at-fault liability policy to your own UM/UIM and stacked household coverage, and build the claim to reach all of it.

    We help drivers, passengers, and families left short by a minimum-limits crash, with the legal help they need to find every dollar of coverage that applies. Call (888) 713-6653 or use the form to start a free, confidential review of your Nevada claim.

     

     

     

     

     

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