Arizona Citizen's Guide to Auto Crash Insurance Calculations
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Arizona Citizen's Guide to Auto Crash Insurance Calculations

This guide explains how an Arizona citizen should analyze a serious crash: identify the at-fault liability stack, separate bodily-injury and wrongful-death claims from property claims, measure the effect of Arizona's 25/50/15 minimum floor, apply Arizona's comparative-fault and several-liability structure, and then determine what uninsured, underinsured, rideshare, employer, household-exclusion, or umbrella coverages may change the real calculation.

Educational public-interest guide. Not legal advice.

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Arizona crash-calculation frame

Arizona's ordinary personal-auto floor is 25/50/15: twenty-five thousand dollars for bodily injury or death to one person, fifty thousand dollars for bodily injury or death to two or more persons in one accident, and fifteen thousand dollars for property damage in one accident. Arizona is an at-fault state, not a no-fault state. There is no Utah-style PIP threshold system standing between the crash and a liability claim.

Arizona also requires insurers to make UM and UIM available and to offer them by written notice up to the policy's bodily-injury liability limits. But that does not mean every Arizona household kept them. In Arizona, the declarations page is often the first real proof of whether the injured household has a meaningful backstop against an uninsured or underinsured driver.

Minimum liability

25k bodily injury to one person, 50k bodily injury per accident, 15k property damage.

UM offered

Insurers must make UM available and offer it by written notice up to the policy's bodily-injury liability limits.

UIM offered

Insurers must also make UIM available and offer it by written notice up to the policy's bodily-injury liability limits.

Several liability

Arizona generally allocates liability in direct proportion to each actor's percentage of fault rather than imposing broad joint-and-several liability.

Core public problem: in Arizona, a citizen may know there is “insurance” and still not know whether the real case is only a 25/50/15 minimum-limits case, a household-exclusion-limited case, a stronger UM/UIM case, a rideshare case, or an employer / umbrella / commercial case with much more coverage.

Coverage cues that matter immediately after a crash

Coverage itemArizona cueWhy it matters
Liability BI25/50 minimumAll third-party human bodily-injury and wrongful-death claims start here unless higher limits, umbrella, employer, rideshare, or commercial coverage exists.
Property damage15k minimumVehicle destruction, bicycles, child seats, electronics, and other property claims compete inside one small property-damage coverage.
UM / UIMMust be offered up to BI liability limitsThe at-fault stack may be small, but the victim household may have a separate first-party backstop if it kept UM/UIM.
Household exclusionArizona permits insurers to limit family-member bodily-injury claims to the state minimum even when higher limits were purchasedFamily passengers may not stand in the same coverage position as strangers in the other car.
Comparative faultArizona reduces damages proportionately and generally assigns several-only liabilityClaim value depends not only on damages, but on percentage allocations across claimants, defendants, and nonparties at fault.
No PIP thresholdArizona is not a no-fault stateThe liability case is not filtered through a Utah-style medical-expense threshold before general damages can begin.

Coverage ladder: minimum through commercial

TierTypical stackWhat the citizen should assume
Tier 0Uninsured / no liability policyNo liability coverage exists. The victim household must look to UM, UIM if relevant, health coverage, direct claims against the driver or estate, and any employer or owner theories.
Tier 1Arizona minimum PPA: 25/50/15This is the legal floor for current ordinary personal auto coverage. In a multi-death or major-trauma crash it is usually catastrophic and quickly exhausted.
Tier 2Common mid PPA: 50/100/25 or 50/100/50Still thin in a catastrophic case, but materially better than the floor.
Tier 3Common higher PPA: 100/300/100 or 100/300/300Often the first household-protection package that meaningfully changes settlement posture.
Tier 4High PPA plus umbrellaPrimary auto may be followed by umbrella or excess layers. Identifying all declarations pages matters.
Tier 5Commercial auto / employer fleet / TNC stackThe whole claim changes if business use, employer coverage, or transportation-network coverage applies.

Post-crash calculation roadmap

StepQuestionPractical consequence
1Who is claiming?Separate the at-fault driver, family passengers, other vehicle occupants, pedestrians, bicyclists, and each item of damaged property. They do not stand in the same coverage position.
2What kind of claim is it?Human death or bodily injury goes to bodily-injury / wrongful-death analysis. Vehicle loss, bicycles, pets, electronics, and gear go to property-damage analysis unless separate first-party coverage applies.
3What is the at-fault stack?Identify personal auto, umbrella, employer, permissive-use, rideshare, commercial, or governmental layers before assuming the case is only minimum-limits.
4Does a household exclusion change the result?Arizona consumer guidance warns that some policies limit family-member bodily-injury coverage to the state minimum even where higher liability limits were purchased.
5What does the victim household carry?Read the declarations page for UM, UIM, collision, comprehensive, rental, and any medical-payments coverage. Arizona does not guarantee a first-party rescue unless the household bought it.
6How is fault allocated?Arizona generally allocates damages in direct proportion to each defendant's percentage of fault and considers nonparties at fault as part of the apportionment exercise.
7Is wrongful death involved?Wrongful-death actions may be brought by statutory survivors or the personal representative for those survivors.

Scenario 1: multi-fatality minimum-limits matrix

Hypothetical catastrophe: a drunk driver, traveling with a spouse, infant child, and family dog, crashes into another passenger car carrying two adults, one child, and that family's bicycle rack and gear. All humans are killed. These tables are educational illustrations, not litigation predictions.

Claimant groupClaim typePrimary coverage to examineMain threshold issueCitizen takeaway
At-fault driverOwn bodily injury / deathNot a third-party liability claim against the driver's own liability policyLiability insurance is not first-party death coverage for the at-fault driver.Look to life insurance, health coverage, MedPay if purchased, or estate planning—not liability.
At-fault driver's spouseWrongful death / bodily injury claim against driver or estatePossible liability claim inside the bodily-injury coverageAt minimum limits, the entire policy is already at the legal floor. On higher-limit policies, a household exclusion may still reduce the available family-member bodily-injury coverage back down to the state minimum.Family passengers do not necessarily occupy the same coverage position as strangers in the other vehicle.
At-fault driver's childWrongful death / bodily injury claim against driver or estateSame bodily-injury coverageNo separate child coverage category exists.Children compete inside the same aggregate as adults.
Other car: adult 1Wrongful deathClassic third-party bodily-injury / wrongful-death claimCompetes with every other covered human claimant in the 50k accident aggregate.The per-accident aggregate can matter more than the 25k per-person figure.
Other car: adult 2Wrongful deathSame bodily-injury coverageSame aggregate competitionClear fault still leaves a very small shared coverage.
Other car: childWrongful deathSame bodily-injury coverageSame aggregate competitionNo separate child lane exists inside liability coverage.
Arizona minimum-limits reality: the catastrophe feature is not just the 25k one-person ceiling. It is that the total bodily-injury coverage for the entire crash is only 50k, while the property-damage coverage is only 15k.

Minimum-limits equal-share illustration for the 50k bodily-injury aggregate

This is an equal-share illustration only. Real allocation depends on settlement structure, beneficiary issues, household-exclusion application, and actual fault allocations.

Covered human claimants competing for BIPer-person capAccident aggregateEqual-share illustration
1 claimant25k50k25k maximum
2 claimants25k each50k total25k each
3 claimants25k each, but 50k total50k total16,667 each
4 claimants25k each, but 50k total50k total12,500 each
5 claimants25k each, but 50k total50k total10,000 each

In the hypothetical above, five human claimants may be competing for the same 50k bodily-injury aggregate: the at-fault driver's spouse and child, plus the three occupants of the struck vehicle. The at-fault driver is not a third-party claimant against the driver's own liability policy.

Property damage, bicycles, pets, and gear

Item or lossUsual coverage laneWhat changes the analysis
Other family's vehicle15k property-damage coverageCollision coverage on the victim side may pay first, but the PD limit still matters for reimbursement and total-loss pressure.
At-fault vehicleUsually not a third-party property-damage claim against the at-fault driver's own liability policyLook to collision or other first-party property coverages, not liability.
Bicycles, racks, helmets, child seats, electronics, luggage15k property-damage coverageThese items compete with the vehicle loss unless other first-party property coverage exists.
PetsProperty / economic-damage analysis, not wrongful-death analysisThe page should treat pets as property-damage items unless some other policy language changes the first-party side.
Property owned by, rented to, in charge of, or transported by the insuredMay be excluded from liability coverageArizona's financial-responsibility statute permits those exclusions.

Arizona UM/UIM structure

Arizona does not mandate that every household keep UM or UIM, but it does require insurers to offer both by written notice up to the policy's bodily-injury liability limits. The policy declarations page is treated by statute as the final expression of the named insured's decision to purchase, lower, or reject the coverage.

Arizona's statute also states that UIM applies when the sum of all applicable bodily-injury liability limits is less than the injured person's total damages, and that UIM is applicable to the difference between those total damages and the total applicable liability limits. Arizona also allows policy language to limit multiple policies or coverages purchased by one insured on different vehicles so that only one policy or coverage, selected by the insured, applies to a single accident.

Your own coverage positionWhat happens after a severe crashCitizen takeaway
UM/UIM kept at full BI limitsYour household may have a strong first-party backstop when the at-fault driver carries too little or no meaningful liability insurance.Arizona's offer statute matters only if the household actually kept the protection.
UM/UIM rejected in whole or in partYour own first-party backstop may be missing or materially smaller than your liability limits.The declarations page matters immediately after the crash.
Multiple policies or vehiclesArizona allows the insurer to limit multiple coverages so that only one policy or coverage selected by the insured applies to one accident.Do not assume easy stacking just because multiple premiums were paid.
Uninsured or phantom-vehicle scenarioUM may become the main bodily-injury recovery source if it was retained.A claimant with weak UM protection may discover that the legal minimum system offers no meaningful substitute.
Underinsured scenarioUIM may apply only to the gap between total damages and total applicable liability limits.The claimant must know both the at-fault stack and the victim household's actual UIM election.
Critical Arizona distinction: Arizona's statute makes the declarations page the final expression of the named insured's UM/UIM decision. After a crash, arguments about what the household thought it bought often collapse into what the declarations page and policy actually show.

Pedestrians and bicyclists

Victim typeHuman injury or death coverageProperty coverageWhat changes the analysis
Pedestrian adultThird-party bodily-injury / wrongful-death claimClothing, carried items, devicesCompetes with all other human BI claimants in the same accident aggregate.
Pedestrian childThird-party bodily-injury / wrongful-death claimStroller or carried itemsNo separate child coverage category exists.
Bicyclist adultThird-party bodily-injury / wrongful-death claimBicycle, helmet, electronics, rack or cargoThe rider's bodily injury is a BI claim; the bicycle and gear are property-damage claims.
Bicyclist childThird-party bodily-injury / wrongful-death claimBicycle and gearThe bodily-injury and property claims still sit in different coverage lanes.
Pedestrian or bicyclist with own UM/UIMPossible first-party backstop after the liability analysisNo automatic cure for ordinary property lossThe victim must know both the at-fault stack and the victim household's own declarations page.

Higher tiers, umbrella, work use, and transportation-network coverage

ScenarioWhat changesWhy the calculation changes
Higher personal-auto tier (50/100/25, 50/100/50, 100/300/100)Larger bodily-injury and property-damage coveragesA severe crash may still overwhelm the policy, but the collapse is less severe than at 25/50/15.
High personal-auto limits plus umbrellaExcess liability may sit above the primary auto policyIf umbrella exists, settlement posture, release strategy, and UIM evaluation may change substantially.
Driver on the jobEmployer auto, workers' compensation, or fleet questions may ariseThe case may shift from a household policy to an employer / commercial stack.
TNC driver logged in but not on a rideArizona requires 25/50/20 primary liability during the logged-in waiting periodThe waiting-period rideshare case may already differ from the ordinary household policy.
TNC driver on a rideArizona requires primary commercial liability of 250k per incident, increasing to 1M when the passenger is occupying the vehicle, plus specified UM coverageThe claim may be radically different from an ordinary 25/50/15 crash.
Personal auto during TNC activityA personal-auto policy is not required to cover the vehicle, driver, owner, or third parties while the driver is logged in or providing transportation-network services unless the policy expressly says soThe ordinary personal-auto policy may disappear at exactly the moment a citizen assumes it still applies.

Why disclosure still matters in Arizona

Arizona does not give claimants a simple Colorado-style presuit disclosure statute with a thirty-day deadline and daily penalties. Your earlier presuit-disclosure materials classify Arizona as a state with no general presuit duty, which means claimants are often pushed to negotiate, sign releases, or file suit without knowing whether the real case is minimum-limits, higher-tier, household-exclusion-limited, rideshare, employer, or umbrella.

That problem is even sharper in Arizona because the household may have separate UM/UIM protection but not know whether it was kept or rejected until the declarations page is obtained. The at-fault side and the injured household's own policy both matter.

Arizona reform point: the citizen should not have to fund a lawsuit just to learn whether the claim is only a 25/50/15 case or whether deeper coverage exists through a higher personal-auto tier, a household-exclusion dispute, a rideshare stack, employer coverage, or an umbrella policy.

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