What Is Rental Reimbursement Coverage?

Last Updated on December 27, 2025
Rental reimbursement coverage (sometimes called transportation expense or replacement rental coverage) is an optional add-on that helps pay for a rental car or other temporary transportation while your vehicle is in the shop for a covered claim.
Most auto insurance companies offer it, but it’s usually not included automatically—and no state requires it. If you add rental reimbursement to your policy, it generally applies when you’re using your own coverage (typically a collision or comprehensive claim) to repair your car.
Key Takeaways
- Rental reimbursement coverage is an optional add-on that helps pay for a rental car while your vehicle is being repaired for a covered claim.
- It usually applies when you’re using your own collision or comprehensive coverage—not for maintenance, mechanical breakdowns, or recreational rentals.
- Most policies have a daily limit and a total maximum per claim, so you may pay out of pocket if your rental costs more than your limits.
- It’s most worth it if you rely on one primary vehicle and don’t have a backup car or easy public transit alternative.
- Rental Reimbursement Coverage Explained
- What Does Rental Reimbursement Coverage Pay For?
- When Can You Use Rental Reimbursement?
- What Rental Reimbursement Coverage Does Not Cover
- How to File a Rental Reimbursement Claim
- Is Rental Reimbursement Coverage Worth It?
- FAQs About Rental Reimbursement Coverage
- Conclusion: Rental Reimbursement Coverage in Plain English
Rental Reimbursement Coverage Explained
Rental reimbursement coverage helps cover the cost of a temporary replacement vehicle when your car can’t be driven because it’s being repaired after a covered loss. It’s designed for real-life situations like:
- Your car is in the shop after an at-fault accident
- Your vehicle is stolen or vandalized and needs repairs before it’s drivable again
- Your car is damaged by weather or another non-collision event and you’re filing a claim
It’s important to know what rental reimbursement isn’t: it doesn’t pay just because you want a rental, and it typically doesn’t apply for routine maintenance or mechanical breakdowns.
What Does Rental Reimbursement Coverage Pay For?
Rental reimbursement typically pays for the daily cost of a rental vehicle up to your policy’s limits while your covered claim is being repaired. Many insurers structure the benefit with:
- A per-day limit (how much the policy will pay each day)
- A total maximum per claim (the most the policy will pay overall)
| Limit Type | What It Means | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Per-day limit | Maximum the policy pays per rental day | $40/day |
| Total maximum | Maximum the policy pays for the entire claim | $1,200 per claim |
| Time limit | Maximum number of covered days (sometimes used instead of a total max) | Up to 30 days |
If your rental costs more than your daily limit, you can usually still rent it—you’ll just pay the difference out of pocket. Also note that rental reimbursement generally covers the base rental cost. Things like gas, deposits, insurance sold by the rental company, tolls, and optional upgrades typically aren’t included.
When Can You Use Rental Reimbursement?
In most cases, rental reimbursement is tied to a covered claim on your policy—meaning your vehicle is being repaired under the coverages you carry. Many insurers require you to have both comp and collision in place before you can add rental reimbursement because those are the coverages that pay to fix your car when you’re at fault or when fault is unclear.
If You’re Not at Fault, The Other Driver May Pay
If another driver is clearly responsible, their liability insurance may cover your rental as part of the claim. However, that can take time while fault is investigated. Rental reimbursement can act as a backup option when you need transportation quickly and you’re already repairing your car through your own policy.
Also keep in mind: once you use your own coverage, your premium can change at renewal depending on your insurer, your state, and your claim history. For more context, see how much rates can rise after a collision claim.
What Rental Reimbursement Coverage Does Not Cover
Rental reimbursement coverage is narrow by design. It usually won’t pay for:
- Routine maintenance (oil changes, brakes, tires, inspections)
- Mechanical breakdowns not caused by a covered claim
- Recreational rentals (vacations, weekend getaways, “just because”)
- Delays unrelated to repairs (for example, waiting weeks to choose a shop or schedule an appointment)
If your loss isn’t covered by your policy, rental reimbursement generally won’t apply either. For example, if your vehicle is in the shop for windshield work but you don’t have coverage for that loss, your rental typically won’t be reimbursed. (Here’s a related guide: will my car insurance replace a windshield?)
How to File a Rental Reimbursement Claim
There are two common ways rental reimbursement is handled:
- Direct billing: You rent from a participating company and the insurer pays up to your limits directly.
- Reimbursement: You pay out of pocket, then submit receipts to your insurer for repayment up to your limits.
Before you rent, call your insurer (or check your online claim portal) to confirm: your daily/total limits, how many days are allowed, whether there’s a waiting period, and whether the insurer requires a specific rental company. If you’re unsure what insurance you need on the rental itself, see rental car insurance explained.
Is Rental Reimbursement Coverage Worth It?
Rental reimbursement is often inexpensive compared to the cost of renting a car for even a few days—but it isn’t necessary for everyone. It can be worth it if:
- You rely on your car for commuting, childcare, or day-to-day errands
- You don’t have a backup vehicle available
- Public transit, rideshare, or borrowing a car isn’t a realistic option
- You’d feel financially squeezed paying for a rental out of pocket during repairs
You may not need it if you have another vehicle you can drive, you work from home most days, or you’re comfortable covering temporary transportation costs yourself.
FAQs About Rental Reimbursement Coverage
Conclusion: Rental Reimbursement Coverage in Plain English
Rental reimbursement coverage helps pay for a rental car while your vehicle is being repaired after a covered comp or collision claim. It’s optional, limit-based (daily and total caps), and most valuable for drivers who depend on one primary vehicle and don’t have an easy backup plan.
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