Beating the Heat: Protecting Your Vehicle (and Your Rates) as Temperatures Rise
As we launch into National Safety Month, we need to talk about the silent enemy of your Auto Insurance premium: Thermal Stress. By the first week of June, temperatures across the country are climbing, and your car is essentially a metal box carrying highly pressurized tires and a cooling system under immense strain.
- The “Blowout” Liability
High temperatures cause the air inside your tires to expand. If you are driving on tires that are already worn or improperly inflated, the combination of hot asphalt and internal pressure creates the perfect recipe for a high-speed blowout. From an insurance perspective, a blowout that leads to an accident is often classified as a “Single-Vehicle At-Fault Accident.” Even though it feels like a mechanical failure, the insurer views it as a “Failure to Maintain,” which can cause your rates to spike for the next three years.
- Roadside Assistance: The “Hidden” Claim Count
Many drivers use their insurance-provided Roadside Assistance for summer overheats or dead batteries. While these aren’t “accidents,” some carriers track the frequency of these calls. If you have four roadside calls in a single year, an insurer might view your vehicle as unreliable or “high-risk,” which can impact your eligibility for the best “Preferred” rates. This June, perform a “Summer Service” (check your coolant levels and battery health) to avoid using that roadside “Get Out of Jail Free” card.
- Interior Heat and “Comprehensive” Risks
In 2026, our cars are filled with more electronics than ever before—integrated tablets, dashcams, and sensor arrays. Leaving these in a car where interior temperatures can hit $140^circtext{F}$ can lead to “Internal Component Failure.” Most auto policies cover external damage (like a tree falling on the car), but they do not cover the mechanical or electronic breakdown caused by leaving your tech in the sun.
This National Safety Month, treat your car like a teammate. Keep it hydrated (coolant), keep its “shoes” in good shape (tires), and it will keep your insurance record clean all summer long.