Yes, full coverage generally helps after an at-fault accident in Florida, but not in the way most drivers expect. Florida is a no-fault state, so your own Personal Injury Protection, or PIP, pays 80 percent of your reasonable medical bills up to 10,000 dollars, no matter who caused the crash, under Florida Statute 627.736. If your full coverage policy includes collision coverage, it also pays to repair your own car after an at-fault wreck, minus your deductible. What full coverage does not pay is your own pain and suffering when you caused the crash. Understanding which part of your policy does what is the key to knowing what you will actually recover.
What Most Drivers Get Wrong About Full Coverage
The phrase full coverage sounds like a promise that everything is handled, and that is exactly where confusion begins. Full coverage is not a single thing, and it is not a legal term. It is a bundle of separate protections that each behaves differently depending on who was at fault. Below, you will see what Florida’s no-fault system actually requires, what PIP pays and what it refuses to pay, how collision and liability coverage split the bill after a crash, and the narrow situations where you can still pursue money beyond your own policy. By the end, the question of whether full coverage covers at-fault accidents will have a clear and honest answer.
How Florida’s No-Fault System Changes The Answer
Florida is one of a handful of no-fault states, and that single fact shapes everything about a car accident claim here. Under Florida Statute 627.736, every vehicle owner must carry at least 10,000 dollars in PIP coverage. No-fault means that after most crashes, you turn first to your own insurance for medical bills, regardless of who caused the accident. You do not start by chasing the other driver’s insurer. PIP pays quickly because it does not wait for anyone to assign blame. This is why the at-fault question is more complicated in Florida than in a traditional fault state. Your medical coverage does not depend on fault at all. Your vehicle and injury recovery, on the other hand, can depend heavily on it.
What PIP Actually Pays After An At-Fault Crash
PIP is the heart of Florida’s no-fault system, and it covers you even when the accident was your fault. Here is what it pays and what it leaves out. PIP generally covers:
- 80 percent of reasonable and necessary medical expenses from the crash, up to the 10,000 dollar limit
- 60 percent of lost wages or lost earning capacity, within that same limit
- A portion of replacement services for tasks you can no longer perform, such as household work
- A death benefit in fatal cases
PIP does not cover:
- Your pain, suffering, or emotional distress
- Damage to your vehicle
- Medical costs beyond the 10,000-dollar cap
There is also a deadline that catches many people off guard. To use your PIP benefits in Florida, you must seek medical treatment within 14 days of the accident. Wait longer, and you can lose the coverage entirely. Knowing the right steps early is why our guide on what to do after a car accident in Miami is worth reading before you ever need it.
Where Collision And Liability Coverage Come In
This is the part of full coverage that directly answers the vehicle-damage side of the at-fault question.
| Coverage type | Who or what it protects | At-fault accident? |
| PIP | Your own injuries | Pays regardless of fault |
| Collision | Your own vehicle | Pays even when you are at fault, minus the deductible |
| Liability (Property Damage) | The other party’s vehicle and property | Pays when you are at fault for their damage |
| Comprehensive | Your vehicle from non-collision events | Not tied to fault |
If your full coverage policy includes collision coverage, it pays to repair or replace your own car after a crash you caused, after you pay your deductible. Your bodily injury and property damage liability coverage pays for the harm you cause to others. Together, that is why full coverage does help after an at-fault accident, just in pieces rather than all at once.
When You Can Recover Beyond Your Own Policy
Florida’s no-fault rules are not the end of the road. In certain situations, you can step outside the system and pursue a claim against an at-fault driver, which matters most when injuries are severe. When another driver caused the crash, and your injuries meet Florida’s serious injury threshold, you can bring a claim against that driver for damages PIP never covers, including full medical costs and pain and suffering. Vehicle damage claims also fall outside of no-fault. A claim for damage to your vehicle can be made directly against the at-fault driver with no PIP-style limit. If you were the at-fault driver, your ability to recover for your own injuries is limited, which is exactly why the no-fault PIP system exists. The system is designed to get every driver basic medical coverage without a fight over blame.
What To Do In The Days After An At-Fault Crash
The steps you take right after a crash protect both your health and your claim, even when you were the one at fault. A calm, documented response keeps your coverage intact and prevents avoidable disputes with your insurer.
- Get medical care within 14 days: This is not optional in Florida. Miss the window, and you can lose your PIP benefits entirely, no matter how legitimate your injuries are.
- Report the accident to your insurer promptly: Delay gives a carrier a reason to question the claim. Stick to the facts and avoid guessing about faults or injuries you have not yet had evaluated.
- Document the scene and the damage: Photos, the crash report, and the other driver’s information all matter, even when the fault seems clear.
- Keep every bill and record: Track medical costs, repair estimates, and lost wages, so your claim reflects the full loss.
- Read your policy before you accept an offer: A quick settlement is not always a fair one, especially when injuries are still developing.
These habits matter most when an injury turns out to be more serious than it first appeared. Early medical records create the link between the crash and the harm.
Common Reasons Insurers Underpay A Florida Claim
Even with the right coverage, getting paid what a policy promises is not automatic. Insurers are businesses, and several familiar tactics can leave drivers shortchanged.
- Disputing medical necessity: A carrier may argue that treatment was not reasonable or related to the crash, cutting a PIP payout below the amount owed.
- Undervaluing a totaled vehicle: The first valuation offer on a totaled car is often lower than the vehicle’s true market value.
- Delaying the claim: Slow handling pressures drivers to accept less just to move on.
- Denying outright: Some valid claims are simply rejected, betting that the driver will not push back.
Recognizing these patterns is the first defense. The second is knowing that an insurer’s decision is not the final word. When a carrier refuses to honor a Florida policy, that refusal can be challenged.
When A Coverage Dispute Needs A Lawyer
Insurers do not always pay what a policy promises. They may underpay a PIP claim, dispute whether treatment was reasonable, undervalue a totaled vehicle, or deny a claim outright. When that happens, the issue shifts from insurance to law. A dispute is worth professional attention when an insurer denies or delays a valid claim, when your medical bills exceed your PIP limit, or when a serious injury opens the door to a claim against the at-fault driver.
The bottom line
So, does full coverage cover at-fault accidents in Florida? In practice, yes, but only through its separate parts. PIP pays a share of your medical bills no matter who was at fault, collision repairs your own car, and liability handles the harm you caused to others, while pain and suffering for an at-fault driver stays off the table. Knowing which coverage applies is the difference between a smooth claim and a frustrating one. If an insurer is not paying what your policy should, the team at Jimenez Mazzitelli Mordes can review your coverage and your options at no cost.