How getting married affects your insurance

  • Coverage clarity
  • Homeowners insurance
  • Auto insurance
A couple is looking at a laptop together.
  • Learn how marriage affects your auto, renters, life and jewelry insurance and why acting within 30 days of your wedding matters.
  • Discover how combining policies and adding a jewelry rider can protect your new household and potentially save you money.
  • Get a practical newlywed insurance checklist covering everything from adding your spouse to your car insurance to updating beneficiaries.

June is the most popular wedding month in the U.S., and amid the excitement of celebrations, insurance is probably the last thing on your mind. But marriage is a recognized life event that touches nearly every policy you own, and a few you probably need. How does getting married affect your insurance? More than most couples expect, and acting within 30 days of your wedding makes the process significantly smoother. Here’s what to update, combine and review, so your coverage reflects your new life together.

What insurance to update after getting married

Marriage isn’t just a personal milestone. It’s a financial one too, and your insurance should reflect that. Some policies have enrollment windows, so prompt action matters. The areas that need your attention most immediately are your auto coverage, property insurance (home, condo or renters), life insurance, jewelry protection and beneficiary designations. Each one is manageable, and several of them can actually save you money when handled together.

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Combining auto insurance after marriage

One of the first questions newlyweds ask is whether to put both cars on one policy. Combining auto insurance after marriage is usually the more cost-effective move. Many carriers offer a marriage car insurance discount, viewing married drivers as a lower statistical risk. You may also qualify for a multi-car discount when you add a spouse to car insurance on the same plan.

That said, it’s not automatic. If one spouse has a recent at-fault accident or violations on their record, combining policies could raise the other’s rate. Canceling a policy mid-term can trigger fees, so timing your renewal date is worth considering. Run a quote comparison before you assume that combining saves money. It usually does, but not always.

Renters insurance for newlyweds

If you’re both renters, how you handle coverage depends on whether you’re sharing one address or still living separately. Renters insurance for newlyweds moving into the same home works by adding your spouse as a named insured on an existing policy or starting a fresh joint policy together. If you’re maintaining two separate addresses, you each need your own policy and both spouses should be listed on both. Liability coverage is tied to your address, and personal property has limitations when it’s located outside of the insured address. Either way, reassess your coverage amounts once you’re settled. Two people means more belongings and your previous limit may not be enough to cover your combined assets.

Protecting your engagement ring and wedding jewelry

Your engagement ring is likely one of the most valuable things you own, and a standard policy probably won’t cover it fully. Most homeowners and renters policies cap jewelry rider homeowners insurance coverage at $1,000 to $2,500, which is far below the replacement value of many rings.

A jewelry rider, also called a scheduled personal property endorsement, lets you insure a specific item for its full appraised value, typically covering loss, theft and even accidental damage.

Get your ring professionally appraised, then contact your carrier to add a scheduled personal property endorsement. It typically runs $1 to $2 per $100 of appraised value, which is an affordable peace of mind for something irreplaceable. For example, a diamond ring appraised at $4,000 would cost about $40 to $80 a year to insure.

Don’t forget to update your beneficiaries

Getting married does not automatically update beneficiary after marriage on existing accounts, and this surprises a lot of couples. A life insurance policy or retirement account you opened years ago may still list a parent or former partner. Go account by account and update everywhere – life insurance policies, 401(k) and individual retirement account (IRA) accounts, bank accounts with payable-on-death designations and any brokerage or investment accounts with transfer-on-death designations.

Bundling home and auto insurance

Bundling home and auto insurance with one carrier is one of the easiest ways newlyweds can reduce their total premium. Carrying multiple policies with the same company often unlocks a multi-policy discount and simplifies your billing and renewals to a single point of contact. Before assuming your current carrier has the best rate, it’s worth shopping around. A VIU by HUB Advisor can compare options from multiple insurance companies on your behalf at no cost to you.

Your newlywed insurance checklist

Now that you know what changes when you get married, here’s your action plan. Most of these steps take one phone call or a quick login, and getting them done early means one less thing on your plate as you settle into married life. Work through this list at your own pace and lean on a VIU by HUB Advisor if you want a hand.

  • Decide whether to combine or keep separate auto policies – Compare quotes both ways before making a move. Combining is often cheaper, but the right answer depends on both your driving histories and your current carriers.
  • Consolidate renters insurance onto one policy – Add your spouse as a named insured and reassess your personal property coverage amount to reflect your combined belongings.
  • Get your engagement ring and bands professionally appraised – Aim to do this within 30 days so you have current documentation of the value before adding a rider.
  • Add a jewelry rider to your renters or homeowners policy – A scheduled personal property endorsement covers your ring for its full appraised value, including loss and accidental damage.
  • Review life insurance coverage and consider new policies together – Marriage is one of the best times to buy or revisit life insurance while you’re younger, and rates are in your favor.
  • Update beneficiaries on all insurance, retirement and financial accounts – Go account by account and make sure your spouse is listed everywhere, including your 401(k), IRA and any payable-on-death bank accounts.
  • Explore bundling home and auto for potential savings – Carrying both policies with the same company can unlock a multi-policy discount and simplify your billing down to one renewal date.
  • Notify your carrier of any name change – A name change needs to be reflected across every policy you hold to avoid any gaps or confusion at claims time.
  • Schedule an annual insurance review as a couple – Your coverage needs will grow as your life does. Planning a yearly check keeps everything aligned as you hit new milestones together.

A VIU by HUB Advisor can review your full picture and find any gaps, free of charge. Talk to an advisor.

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