11 First Car Insurance Mistakes That Can Cost Indian Drivers Lakhs
Your first car insurance policy is supposed to protect you — not surprise you at the garage. This is the premium 2026 checklist Indian first-time drivers, students, families and Ola/Uber beginners actually need. Free PDF inside.
Buying your first car is a milestone. But the policy you sign in those last five minutes — usually on a phone, with a glowing "Pay Now" button — quietly shapes the next three to five years of your driving life. The most expensive first car insurance mistakes in India are almost never dramatic. They are small clicks. The wrong IDV. A skipped add-on. A box ticked that says "personal use" when you actually drive a few Ola rides on the weekend. Months later, when a claim is needed, those tiny choices turn into large numbers on a garage estimate.
This guide is for first-time drivers, students with their first hatchback, families buying their first sedan or SUV, and young Ola/Uber partners getting their first cab. It walks through the 11 first car insurance mistakes we see most often across Tier 1 and Tier 2 India, why they happen, what they cost, and exactly how to avoid each one. There is also a free downloadable PDF checklist near the end.
The biggest first car insurance mistakes in India are buying only third-party cover on a new car, under-declaring IDV, skipping zero depreciation and engine protection, using a private policy for paid Ola/Uber rides, hiding modifications, and not reading the exclusions. Each can quietly cost lakhs at claim time.
*Indicative observation based on Aero Insurance customer conversations across India. Actual figures vary by city, age group and insurer.
Why First-Time Drivers Make Insurance Mistakes
The honest reason is simple: nobody teaches insurance. You learn how to start the car, how to parallel park, even how to negotiate at the showroom — but the policy document is treated like the boring part. So you skim it, click "buy", and move on. Combine that with aggressive online quotes that lead with the lowest premium, and you have a recipe for the most common first car insurance mistakes in India.
Three psychological habits drive most of these errors. First, the cheapest-first bias: when comparing quotes online, the eye naturally locks on the lowest number. Second, the "it won't happen to me" bias: first-time drivers usually believe they will drive carefully enough to avoid claims. Third, the jargon fatigue effect: terms like IDV, NCB, zero dep, deductible and PA cover are confusing, so most people accept the defaults to escape the form. These three patterns, together, quietly cost Indian drivers thousands every year.
"The cheapest first car insurance policy in India is usually the one that costs the most when something actually goes wrong."
— Aero Insurance Advisory TeamThe Most Expensive First Car Insurance Mistakes in India
Below, we go deeper into 11 specific first car insurance mistakes. Each has a short story, a brief "what it actually costs you" explanation, and a one-line fix. Read them all once before your next policy purchase or renewal — you will likely catch at least two errors that quietly apply to you today.
The 11 First Car Insurance Mistakes (In Detail)
These are arranged roughly in the order you face them — from the first quote you compare to the day you finally need to claim.
Choosing the cheapest policy without comparing what is actually covered
The most universal of all first car insurance mistakes. A ₹2,200 third-party-only plan and a ₹9,400 comprehensive + zero dep plan look like the same "car insurance" on a comparison screen — but at claim time they are two completely different products.
Third-party cover pays only for damage you cause to others. Your own dented bumper, your stolen car, your monsoon-flooded engine — none of it is paid for. For a new car or a first-time driver still learning, this gap is usually too big to ignore.
Under-declaring IDV to reduce the premium
The Insured Declared Value (IDV) is the maximum amount your insurer will pay if your car is stolen or declared a total loss. Many quote engines let you slide the IDV down to lower the premium. Tempting — and one of the most expensive Indian car insurance mistakes.
A car with a fair market value of ₹8.5 lakh insured at an IDV of ₹6 lakh saves a small amount of premium today, but loses ₹2.5 lakh of potential payout the day it gets stolen from outside a market. The "savings" never materialise; the loss might.
Skipping the zero depreciation add-on on a new car
On modern cars, plastic, fibre and rubber make up most of the bumpers, cladding and lamp units. Without a zero depreciation (also called "bumper to bumper") add-on, the insurer deducts depreciation on these parts at claim time — meaning a ₹40,000 garage bill might lead to a ₹30,000 payout, with you covering the rest.
Skipping zero dep on a sub-5-year-old car is one of the costliest first car insurance mistakes we see during claims.
Misunderstanding the No Claim Bonus (NCB)
NCB is a discount on your own-damage premium for every claim-free year — it can rise to 50% after five clean years. First-time owners often make two NCB errors: they claim for small dents (wiping out the discount) and they let it lapse during renewal gaps.
Even worse, when buying a second car or switching insurers, they forget that NCB belongs to the person, not the car — and that it must be transferred properly. See our NCB complete guide.
Falling for zero depreciation myths
"Zero dep means everything is free." It does not. The cover removes most depreciation on replaced parts during an own-damage claim, but it does not cover wear and tear, engine seizure from oil leakage, or theft beyond your IDV. Believing the myth leads to disappointed expectations and angry claim conversations.
Personal vs Commercial usage confusion (Ola/Uber drivers, beware)
One of the fastest-growing first car insurance mistakes in India today. Drivers buy a private car, take a private car policy, and then start driving on Ola, Uber, Rapido or inDrive on the weekends to make extra income. The car is still legally a private vehicle — and that is exactly why the insurer can reject a claim arising from a commercial trip.
If you plan to drive paid rides, your car must be registered for commercial use, and insured under a commercial vehicle policy. See our detailed guide: Ola/Uber driver insurance India.
Wrong fuel type or fuel-switch not disclosed
CNG and LPG kits are common in Delhi-NCR, UP, Maharashtra and Gujarat. But many first-time owners get an after-market CNG kit installed without informing the insurer. If a fire or accident is later linked to the un-declared kit, the insurer can refuse to pay.
Not disclosing modifications, accessories or wraps
Alloy wheels, body wraps, performance exhausts, sound systems, lift kits, after-market tail lamps — anything not from the showroom is a modification. Undeclared modifications can lead to partial or full claim rejection if they contributed to the damage. Same rule, same reason as the fuel-kit example.
Skipping engine protection, roadside assistance and consumables
Three of the most under-used yet most useful add-ons for first-time Indian drivers. Engine protection covers hydrostatic damage and oil leakage damage — extremely valuable in cities prone to waterlogging. Roadside assistance handles flat tyres, dead batteries and lockouts. Consumables cover the small fluids and parts a normal claim ignores.
Not reading the policy exclusions and fine print
Most claim rejections are perfectly legal. They happen because something in the policy wording — a deductible, a sub-limit, a list of excluded events — was never read. Driving without a valid licence, drink-driving, mechanical breakdown, racing, and consequential losses are common standard exclusions, but each insurer adds its own.
See our breakdown of 10 reasons car insurance claims get rejected in India.
Buying alone, online, with no advisor in the loop
For someone buying a phone, online-only is fine. For first car insurance, going fully DIY often locks in two or three of the mistakes above without you noticing. A short conversation with a licensed advisor catches the IDV, NCB, add-on and usage decisions before you pay — at no extra cost to you.
Review your first car insurance policy in 15 minutes — free
Don't gamble on your first car. Our Aero Insurance advisors will sanity-check your IDV, add-ons, NCB and usage type — and flag any of the 11 mistakes hiding in your current quote.
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Why First-Time Drivers' Claims Get Delayed
Claim rejection grabs the headlines, but claim delay is the everyday pain. A delayed claim can leave a first-time owner without a car for weeks, juggling app cabs and angry WhatsApp messages to the insurer. The reasons are usually preventable.
Many of the most expensive first car insurance mistakes only surface here — when the claim is being processed. The most frequent first-time driver claim-delay triggers we see at Aero include:
- Late intimation — informing the insurer days after the accident instead of within hours.
- No FIR when one was required (theft, third-party injury, major damage).
- Wrong garage — going to a non-network workshop without confirming reimbursement steps.
- Missing documents — DL, RC, policy copy, photographs of the scene.
- Undisclosed modifications noticed during the surveyor's inspection.
- Cash-loss style claims filed without the correct first-information procedure.
Checklist: Before You Buy Your First Car Insurance
Print this, screenshot it, or bookmark this section — it is the exact list our advisors walk first-time drivers through. Tick each item before you click "Pay" on any policy.
Confirm the base policy type
Comprehensive cover for new and near-new cars. Don't accept default third-party-only.
Fix the IDV correctly
Set IDV near fair market value — never the lowest slider option.
Choose the right add-ons
Zero dep, engine protection, RSA, consumables, NCB protect — pick based on city + car.
Check deductibles & sub-limits
Compulsory + voluntary deductible. Sub-limits on tyres, glass, paint.
Declare usage honestly
Private or commercial? Personal commute or Ola/Uber? Decide before buying.
Read the exclusions
Two minutes saves twenty thousand. Promise.
Checklist: Before You File a Car Insurance Claim
When an accident or incident happens, the first 24 hours matter most. Even before calling family, do this:
- Photograph the scene — wide shots, close-ups, registration plates and surroundings.
- Inform the insurer immediately — most policies expect intimation within 24–48 hours.
- File an FIR if there is theft, third-party injury or major damage.
- Do not move the car beyond what is safe, until the insurer or surveyor advises.
- Use a cashless network garage where possible — confirm cashless eligibility first.
- Keep documents ready — Driving Licence, RC, policy copy, FIR (if any), photos.
- Do not approve repairs blindly — wait for the surveyor's nod before signing the estimate.
The Aero motor insurance claim process guide and cashless claim process go deeper, step by step.
10 Questions to Ask Your Insurance Advisor
A confident advisor is one of the best defences against first car insurance mistakes. If your advisor cannot answer these ten questions calmly and clearly, find another advisor:
- "What IDV are we setting for my car, and why this number?"
- "Is the policy you are quoting comprehensive or third-party-only?"
- "Which add-ons are you including, and why each one for my usage?"
- "Is my car eligible for zero depreciation? How many claims per year?"
- "What is the compulsory deductible? Are we adding a voluntary deductible?"
- "How do I file a claim? What is the intimation window?"
- "Are there any sub-limits I should know about (glass, paint, tyres)?"
- "How will my NCB be calculated next year?"
- "Is the policy valid for my city, commute and any commercial use I might do?"
- "What is not covered? Walk me through the top exclusions."
Want these 10 questions answered for your specific car? An Aero Insurance advisor will walk you through them in one short call.
Book a free consultationFree Downloadable PDF: The First Car Insurance Mistakes Checklist (2026)
The full, designed PDF version of this checklist is free for our readers. It includes the 11 first car insurance mistakes, the buying checklist, the claim checklist and the 10 advisor questions — formatted for printing or saving on your phone.
The First Car Insurance Mistakes Checklist (India 2026)
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When to Contact an Aero Insurance Advisor
A short call genuinely helps in these moments:
- Buying your first car insurance policy — new or used vehicle.
- Renewing a policy where you are unsure of IDV or add-ons.
- Switching insurers and worried about NCB transfer.
- Adding a CNG/LPG kit, alloy wheels, body wrap, or any modification.
- Starting to drive on Ola, Uber, Rapido or any paid ride-hailing platform.
- Filing a claim and feeling overwhelmed by paperwork.
- Comparing zero depreciation, comprehensive and third-party plans for the first time.
Talk to an Aero Insurance advisor before you renew
We will read your policy with you, in plain English. Two questions in, you will already know whether you are about to make one of the 11 most expensive first car insurance mistakes.
Call us: +91 7800095199 · +91 8953146584 — friendly guidance, no obligation.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the most common first car insurance mistakes in India?
The most common first car insurance mistakes in India are choosing only third-party cover on a new car, under-declaring IDV, skipping zero depreciation and engine protection add-ons, using a private policy for Ola/Uber rides, not disclosing modifications, and not reading the policy exclusions. Each one quietly costs more at claim time than the premium you "saved".
Is third-party car insurance enough for a first-time driver?
Third-party cover is the legal minimum under the Motor Vehicles Act, but it does not pay for damage to your own car, theft, fire or natural calamities. For a first-time driver who is still learning, a comprehensive plan with zero depreciation is usually a more balanced choice. Coverage varies by insurer — read the policy wording carefully.
Should I declare a lower IDV to reduce my first car insurance premium?
No. Under-declaring IDV is one of the most expensive first car insurance mistakes. A lower IDV directly reduces your claim payout in case of theft or total loss. Always declare an IDV that reflects the fair current market value of your car.
Why do first-time drivers' claims get rejected in India?
Common reasons include driving without a valid licence, delayed claim intimation, using a private car for commercial Ola or Uber rides without commercial cover, undisclosed modifications, and breaches of policy conditions or exclusions. Claim decisions depend on the insurer's terms — always read the exclusions before buying.
Which add-ons should a first-time car owner consider in India?
For most first-time owners, the commonly considered add-ons are zero depreciation, engine protection, roadside assistance, consumables, return-to-invoice and NCB protection. The right mix depends on your car, city and driving pattern — a quick conversation with an advisor usually helps narrow it down.
Can I drive for Ola or Uber on a private car insurance policy?
No. Driving for Ola, Uber or any paid ride-hailing service on a private policy is a serious first car insurance mistake. The car must be registered and insured for commercial use. Always disclose commercial use upfront so the insurer can issue the correct policy.
Final Word: Avoid the 11 First Car Insurance Mistakes — Drive Calmer
If you remember just one idea from this guide, make it this: your first car insurance policy is not a tax to be minimised — it is a tool to be configured. The 11 first car insurance mistakes in this guide are not exotic edge cases. They are the quiet, default choices that thousands of Indian first-time drivers make every month, and they are the same choices that cost lakhs when a claim finally arrives.
Get the base policy right. Pick a fair IDV. Add zero depreciation and engine protection where they fit. Be honest about how you drive — including any Ola or Uber work. Declare modifications. Read the exclusions. And keep a calm, prepared list ready for the day you need to claim.
You can read more on our Car Insurance page, book a free appointment, or message us on WhatsApp. For official regulatory information on motor insurance in India, refer to the IRDAI website.