No, routine upkeep like oil changes, tires, brakes, and tune-ups is paid out of pocket, not through standard auto insurance.
Car insurance is built for sudden losses: crashes, theft, storms, and liability claims. Maintenance is the opposite. It’s planned, predictable, and tied to normal wear. Mixing the two would turn insurance into a prepaid service plan, which is not how most policies are priced or regulated.
This article clears up what’s excluded, what can be covered, and how to spot the few add-ons that blur the line. You’ll finish with a simple way to check your own policy, plus a checklist you can keep for renewals and repairs.
What Auto Insurance Is Designed To Pay For
Most car policies split into two buckets: damage you cause to others and damage to your own vehicle from covered events. The terms vary by insurer, yet the logic stays steady: insurance pays when something unexpected happens and you have a covered loss.
Liability Coverages
Liability pays for other people’s injuries and property damage when you’re at fault. It doesn’t fix your own car and it doesn’t fund routine upkeep. If you rear-end someone, liability can pay for the other car’s repairs and medical costs up to your limits, while your own repair bill depends on the coverages you chose.
Collision And Comprehensive Coverages
Collision can pay to repair your vehicle after a crash with another car or an object, subject to your deductible and policy limits. Comprehensive (often called “other than collision”) can pay for losses like theft, vandalism, falling objects, fire, flood, or hail.
State regulators often spell this out plainly. The California Department of Insurance says comprehensive and collision can pay for physical damage from covered causes, and it “does not cover mechanical breakdown, normal wear and tear, or maintenance.” California Department of Insurance coverage overview
Why Maintenance Is Excluded From Standard Policies
Insurance relies on pooling risk. A lot of drivers pay premiums so the insurer can pay the smaller group that has a covered loss during the policy term. Maintenance doesn’t fit that model for three reasons.
Wear Is Predictable
Brake pads wear down. Tires age. Fluids break down. The timing differs by driving style and vehicle, yet every car needs these jobs. When a cost is expected for nearly everyone, it doesn’t behave like an insurable risk.
Maintenance Costs Track Choices
Where you service your car, what parts you pick, and how long you keep items in service can swing costs a lot. Insurance pricing works best when losses aren’t controlled by day-to-day choices.
Claims Would Push Premiums Up For Everyone
If oil changes were covered, the insurer would need to collect that money from drivers up front. Premiums would rise to match routine shop visits, then rise again to cover administration and fraud controls. At that point, you’d be paying an extra fee to get your own money back.
Consumer materials from the National Association of Insurance Commissioners describe auto insurance as protection against financial losses tied to accidents and other covered events. That framing helps explain why upkeep sits outside the promise. NAIC auto insurance overview
Does Insurance Cover Car Maintenance? What Policies Exclude
In plain terms, “maintenance” means service that keeps the car operating as designed. Insurers usually treat these as owner costs, not claimable losses:
- Oil and filter changes
- Tire rotation, balancing, replacement from tread wear
- Brake pads and rotors worn from normal use
- Belts, hoses, spark plugs, and routine tune-up parts
- Fluids, wiper blades, bulbs, and fuses
- Alignments, battery replacement from age
A common confusion is “my car won’t start” versus “my car was damaged.” A dead battery from age is upkeep. A battery destroyed by a covered fire loss is tied to a covered event. Same part, different cause, different result.
Car Maintenance And Insurance Coverage Rules For Repairs
People often use “maintenance” as a catch-all for any repair bill. Insurers don’t. They separate costs by cause of loss. That’s why two drivers can have the same broken part and get two different answers.
Covered Event Versus Wear
If a part fails because it’s old, worn, or neglected, the policy usually treats it as upkeep. If a part is damaged because a covered event happened, the policy may treat it as physical damage. The claim is tied to what happened, not just what broke.
One Shop Visit Can Hold Two Buckets Of Costs
After a crash, a shop might find worn brakes, old tires, or a leaking gasket that has nothing to do with the accident. Your estimate can end up split: collision damage that may be paid by insurance, plus unrelated upkeep you pay yourself.
Betterment And Wear-Related Reductions
Some policies and claim practices can reduce payment when a repair replaces an already-worn item with a newer one. This is sometimes described as “betterment.” It shows up most often with parts that wear out through normal use. If you see a deduction you don’t understand, ask the adjuster what policy language it ties to and what documentation supports the calculation.
When A Repair Feels Like Maintenance But Can Still Be Covered
Some repairs feel routine because they happen often, yet the cause can bring them into coverage. The trick is to separate the part that failed from why it failed.
Crash Damage That Involves Wear Items
Brake parts are upkeep when they wear out. If your brakes are damaged in a collision, collision coverage can apply. In a shop estimate, you might see a mix: covered crash damage plus owner-paid wear replacement that was already due. Insurers often pay for the covered portion, not for the already-worn condition.
Road Hazard Versus Normal Tire Wear
Worn tread is not a claim. A tire cut by debris during a covered incident can be different, yet outcomes vary by policy wording and claim facts. If a crash or vandalism event damages a tire and wheel, the related physical damage can fall under collision or comprehensive.
Weather Or Theft Losses
Hail damage is not upkeep. Theft of catalytic converters is not upkeep. Those are sudden losses that match what comprehensive is meant to cover. The Insurance Information Institute’s coverage basics page lays out how collision and comprehensive fit into a “full coverage” style setup. III: auto insurance basics
Optional Coverages People Confuse With Maintenance
Some add-ons can pay for certain repairs or services. They still don’t turn your policy into a maintenance plan, yet they can help with the kinds of bills that arrive at the worst time.
Roadside Assistance And Towing
Towing and labor coverage can pay for a tow, a jump start, or a lockout call, depending on the endorsement. It pays for the service call, not for the new battery, new alternator, or other parts that fix the root problem. Read the service limits and any per-event caps.
Rental Reimbursement
This can pay for a rental car while your car is being repaired after a covered claim. It doesn’t pay for repairs that aren’t tied to a covered event.
Mechanical Breakdown Insurance
Mechanical breakdown insurance (MBI) is closer to a repair contract than classic auto coverage. It can help pay for certain mechanical or electrical failures, often with a deductible per repair. Many MBI products exclude wear items and scheduled service, and many are only available for newer cars with mileage limits. If your insurer offers MBI, compare it line-by-line with a vehicle service contract.
Vehicle Service Contracts And Warranties
A manufacturer warranty is tied to defects and specific time or mileage windows. A service contract is an optional product that can cover certain repairs after the warranty period, with its own terms and exclusions. The Federal Trade Commission explains the difference between auto warranties and auto service contracts, plus scam patterns to watch for. FTC overview of warranties and service contracts
Questions To Ask Before Buying A Service Contract
- What parts are excluded as wear items?
- Do you need pre-approval before repairs start?
- Is there a waiting period or mileage waiting window?
- Can you pick any licensed shop, or only a network?
- Is the deductible per visit or per repair line?
- What is the cancellation policy and refund method?
How Claims Pay For Repairs And Why It Matters
Even when a loss is covered, insurance rarely pays “whatever the shop says” with no guardrails. Knowing the common claim parts helps you estimate your real out-of-pocket cost before you file.
Deductible Comes First
For collision and comprehensive, you usually pay the deductible before the insurer pays the rest of the covered repair cost. If your deductible is $1,000 and the covered damage is $1,200, the claim may not help much.
Actual Cash Value Sets A Ceiling
Insurers often pay up to the vehicle’s actual cash value (ACV) when repair costs get too high. If repairs near or exceed ACV, the insurer may treat the car as a total loss and pay ACV, minus the deductible, plus taxes and fees where required by law or policy terms.
Parts, Labor Rates, And Documentation
Shops and insurers may differ on labor time, labor rates, and parts pricing. Many insurers use estimating systems and preferred pricing for common parts. If a shop finds hidden damage, supplements can update the estimate. Keep photos, tow receipts, and diagnostic notes, since clear documentation helps the process move faster.
How To Check Your Own Policy Without Guesswork
You don’t need to be an insurance pro to find the answer for your car. You just need to read the right pages in the right order.
Step 1: Read The Declarations Page
The declarations page lists what you bought: liability limits, deductibles for collision and comprehensive, and any endorsements like towing or rental. If collision and comprehensive aren’t listed, damage to your own car from a crash or theft may not be covered at all.
Step 2: Find The Exclusions Section
Most policies have a section titled “Exclusions,” “Losses We Do Not Pay,” or similar. That’s where you’ll see language about mechanical breakdown, wear, deterioration, and maintenance. Some exclusions are short and blunt; others list specific items.
Step 3: Match The Cause Of Loss
When you wonder “is this covered,” write a one-line cause: “hit a deer,” “rear-ended,” “hail,” “oil leak from old gasket,” “starter failed.” Insurance responds to the cause more than the symptom.
Step 4: Expect Split Bills
Shops often uncover unrelated worn parts during a repair. You might get two buckets on the estimate: covered damage and owner-paid upkeep that was already due. Ask the shop to label both, so you can see what the insurer is being billed for.
Coverage Scenarios And Likely Outcomes
The lines below aren’t a promise about your policy. They show the usual pattern in standard U.S. auto policies, with claim facts that insurers and regulators often describe.
| Situation | What It Really Is | Likely Coverage Path |
|---|---|---|
| Oil change due at 5,000 miles | Scheduled service | Owner-paid maintenance |
| Brake pads worn to the indicator | Wear item | Owner-paid maintenance |
| Brakes damaged in a crash | Physical damage from collision | Collision claim minus deductible |
| Tire bald from age | Wear and deterioration | Owner-paid replacement |
| Tire and wheel damaged during vandalism | Sudden loss | Comprehensive claim minus deductible |
| Engine seized after missed oil changes | Maintenance neglect | Not covered under standard auto policy |
| Engine damaged after a flood | Weather loss | Comprehensive claim if flood is covered |
| Alternator fails from age | Mechanical breakdown | Owner-paid, or MBI/service contract if purchased |
| Windshield cracked by flying rock | Physical damage from road debris | Comprehensive claim; some policies offer glass options |
Ways To Cut Repair Costs Without Filing A Claim For Wear
If you were hoping insurance would pay for upkeep, you’re not alone. The next best move is to cut the size and timing of those bills so they don’t sting.
Follow The Service Schedule In Your Owner’s Manual
Manufacturers publish service intervals tied to mileage and time. Sticking to those intervals helps you avoid cascade failures that can turn a small service into a big repair. Keep receipts and a simple log. It helps at resale time and it helps if you ever need warranty work.
Use A Maintenance Sinking Fund
Set aside a fixed amount each month for tires, brakes, fluids, and the “surprise” shop visit. Some drivers start with a per-mile estimate, then adjust after a year of real costs. The goal is cash flow: when the battery dies, you pay it from the fund, not a credit card.
Pick Deductibles With Your Cash Buffer In Mind
High deductibles can cut premiums, yet they raise the amount you must pay when a covered loss happens. Pick a deductible you can pay on a bad week. A deductible is not maintenance, yet it affects when a claim makes sense.
Know When A Claim Is Worth It
Small claims can be tempting. Still, claim history can affect renewal decisions and pricing. Use your insurer’s estimate process to see what will actually be paid after the deductible, then decide with clear numbers.
What Adjusters And Shops Usually Ask
When you report a loss, expect questions that trace the cause. These aren’t trick questions. They help separate a covered event from wear or neglect.
- What happened, and when did it happen?
- Where was the car, and was there a police report?
- Was the car drivable right after the event?
- What warning lights came on, and when?
- Was there prior damage or a prior leak?
If the event is clear (hail, theft, crash), the claim process is usually straightforward. If it’s a “car won’t run” situation, documentation matters more: photos, tow invoice, diagnostic notes, and service records.
Coverage Checklist You Can Keep For Renewals And Repairs
Use this checklist to sort costs into three lanes: insurance claim, warranty or service contract, or owner-paid upkeep.
| What To Check | What It Tells You | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Cause of the problem | Event loss vs wear vs defect | Write a one-line cause before you call |
| Collision and comprehensive listed | Whether your own car damage can be covered | Confirm deductibles on the declarations page |
| Exclusions wording | Wear, deterioration, mechanical breakdown language | Search the policy PDF for “wear” and “maintenance” |
| Towing and rental endorsements | Help with service calls and downtime | Check limits per event and per day |
| Warranty and service contract dates | Whether defects or failures may be covered outside insurance | Keep contract number and phone in your glove box |
| Repair estimate split | Covered damage vs owner-paid wear items | Ask the shop to separate both buckets |
| Deductible vs payout | What you pay even on a covered claim | Compare net payout with your cash reserves |
Insurance is for sudden, covered losses. Maintenance is a budget line you control. Pair a realistic maintenance fund with the right coverages for big losses, and you stop expecting the policy to pay for wear.
References & Sources
- California Department of Insurance.“Automobile Insurance Text Version.”States that physical damage coverages do not pay for mechanical breakdown, wear and tear, or maintenance.
- National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC).“Auto Insurance.”Explains core auto insurance coverage areas and how policies are structured.
- Insurance Information Institute (III).“Auto Insurance Basics—Understanding Your Coverage.”Summarizes common coverages like liability, collision, and comprehensive.
- Federal Trade Commission (FTC).“Auto Warranties and Auto Service Contracts.”Explains how warranties and service contracts differ from insurance and lists scam patterns to watch for.

Certification: BSc in Mechanical Engineering
Education: Mechanical engineer
Lives In: 539 W Commerce St, Dallas, TX 75208, USA
Md Amir is an auto mechanic student and writer with over half a decade of experience in the automotive field. He has worked with top automotive brands such as Lexus, Quantum, and also owns two automotive blogs autocarneed.com and taxiwiz.com.