Busted! 10 NC Auto & Home Insurance Myths Costing Surry County Families Money in 2026
Busted! 10 NC Auto & Home Insurance Myths Costing Surry County Families Money in 2026
Grab your sweet tea, neighbor. Today we're taking a baseball bat to ten of the biggest insurance myths still floating around Surry County — including one so North Carolina-specific that it's the opposite of what folks believe in every other state. Some of these have probably cost you real money. Let's fix that.
⚡ Quick Answer
- Red cars DON'T cost more: Color isn't a factor in any NC auto insurance rating formula. Not one.
- Women DON'T pay less in NC: NC law bans gender-based auto rating — making us one of just six states that do this.
- Your home insurance DOES NOT cover flooding: Never has, never will — you need a separate flood policy.
- Insurance follows the car, not the driver: If you lend out your truck, you're lending out your policy too.
In This Guide
- Why These Myths Cost You Real Money
- Top 3 Auto Insurance Myths Surry County Still Believes
- Top 3 NC Home Insurance Myths (These One's Are Critical)
- The Myth vs. Truth Scoresheet (All 10)
- 4 Rapid-Fire Myth Busters
- 10 Ways to Escape the Myth Trap
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Get Your Free Quote Comparison
Why These Myths Cost You Real Money
Hey neighbor. Out here in Elkin NC and across Surry County, insurance myths get passed down like family recipes — from your uncle at the Thanksgiving table, your buddy at the barber shop, that one coworker who swears their cousin knows a guy. The problem? Half the time, that folksy wisdom is flat-out wrong. And the wrong myth, believed long enough, can cost you hundreds of dollars a year or leave your family totally unprotected when the storm rolls through.
So let's have a little fun. I've pulled together the ten biggest insurance myths I hear every single week — the ones that make me want to pour another cup of coffee and politely set the record straight. Some are entertaining. Some are shocking. And one of them is a North Carolina specialty that's the exact opposite of what people in other states believe.
Ready? Let's break some folklore.
Top 3 Auto Insurance Myths Surry County Still Believes
"Red cars cost more to insure than any other color."
✅ TruthCompletely, totally, 100% busted. Your car's color has zero impact on your insurance rate. In fact, your insurance company doesn't even ask what color your car is on most applications. What actually moves the needle? Make, model, engine size, safety features, the car's theft rate, how expensive the parts are to fix, your driving record, and where you park it overnight.
Nearly half of all American drivers still believe this one. If you've been paying extra because you drove a candy-apple-red Mustang out of the lot… well, you haven't been. But you might've been worrying for no reason.
🎯 Verdict: 100% Myth"Women always pay less for car insurance than men."
✅ TruthIn most states? Yes. In North Carolina? Nope. This is the one that surprises everybody. NC General Statute 58-36-10 explicitly prohibits insurance companies from using age OR gender as a rating factor for private passenger auto insurance. We're one of only a small handful of states with this rule — the others being California, Hawaii, Massachusetts, Montana, and Pennsylvania.
So if your sister-in-law in Virginia is paying less than her husband for the same coverage, she is. But here in Elkin? You and your spouse, with identical driving records and identical cars, will pay the exact same rate. The NC Rate Bureau sees to it.
🎯 Verdict: Myth in NC (True almost everywhere else)"Car thieves only go after new, expensive cars."
✅ TruthBackwards. Thieves don't typically steal cars to keep or drive — they steal them to chop up and sell for parts. And guess which cars have the easiest-to-sell parts? Older models with millions of units on the road. Year after year, the most-stolen vehicle in America is a 1990s Honda Civic or Honda Accord.
That old pickup you've been driving since Dubya was president? Thieves might want it more than your neighbor's brand-new SUV. This matters in Surry County because folks often skip comprehensive coverage on an older vehicle, figuring "nobody would want this thing." Then they lose it and wish they hadn't.
🎯 Verdict: Busted — older cars get stolen a LOTTop 3 NC Home Insurance Myths (These Ones Are Critical)
"My homeowners insurance covers flooding."
✅ TruthIt doesn't. Not yours, not your neighbor's, not anybody's standard home policy in North Carolina. Flooding is specifically excluded from every standard HO-3 homeowners policy sold in NC. According to the National Flood Insurance Program, about 90% of all natural disasters in the U.S. involve flooding — so this is the exclusion that bites the most people.
Hurricane Helene proved this brutally in western North Carolina in 2024. Folks whose homes were washed out by swollen creeks and rivers discovered — at the worst possible moment — that their insurance didn't cover the water. Flood protection requires a separate policy through FEMA's NFIP or a private flood carrier. Even if you're not in a "high-risk" zone, floods happen to low-risk homes more often than folks realize.
🎯 Verdict: Dangerous Myth — check your flood coverage TODAY
"If my neighbor's tree falls on my house, their insurance pays."
✅ TruthUsually the opposite. When a windstorm rips through Surry County and your neighbor's big oak tree lands on your roof, your homeowners insurance handles the damage. Your neighbor's policy only comes into play if you can prove they were negligent — like the tree was visibly dead, they knew it, and they refused to deal with it.
This one causes real tension between neighbors after every big storm. Now you know how to explain it without the argument.
🎯 Verdict: Myth — your policy pays, not theirs"If it's an 'Act of God,' insurance won't cover it."
✅ TruthGood news, neighbor — this one has people scared for no reason. "Act of God" is an old insurance term for unpreventable natural events, and most of them are absolutely covered by your standard NC homeowners policy. Lightning strikes, tornadoes, hail, windstorms, falling trees — all covered under a typical HO-3 policy.
The only major "acts of God" that aren't covered by standard home insurance are floods and earthquakes, which need separate policies. Everything else that the sky or the ground throws at your home is usually on the covered list. So the next time someone waves their hands and says "oh well, it's an Act of God, you're out of luck" — politely correct them.
🎯 Verdict: Mostly Myth (except floods & earthquakes)The Myth vs. Truth Scoresheet — All 10 Busted
Here's the full scoreboard. Save this, screenshot it, or send it to your cousin who keeps telling you red cars cost more to insure.
| # | The Myth | Verdict | The NC Truth |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Red cars cost more to insure | BUSTED | Color is not a rating factor. Period. |
| 2 | Women pay less than men | BUSTED in NC | NC prohibits gender-based auto rating. |
| 3 | Thieves only target new cars | BUSTED | 1990s Hondas are stolen MORE than new cars. |
| 4 | Homeowners covers flooding | BUSTED | Never covered. Need separate flood policy. |
| 5 | Neighbor's tree = neighbor's policy pays | BUSTED | Your policy pays unless negligence is proven. |
| 6 | "Act of God" means nothing's covered | BUSTED | Wind, hail, lightning ARE covered. Floods aren't. |
| 7 | Insurance follows the driver | BUSTED | It follows the car. Your policy pays first. |
| 8 | "Full coverage" means everything's covered | BUSTED | Deductibles and exclusions still apply. |
| 9 | Older drivers always cost more | BUSTED | NC allows 55+ discounts by statute. |
| 10 | Stuff stolen from my car is covered by auto | BUSTED | That's homeowners or renters — not auto. |
4 Rapid-Fire Myth Busters
These four deserve their own moment. Short answers, straight truth, no fluff.
"Insurance follows the driver, not the car."
BUSTED. Opposite in NC. When your cousin borrows your truck and rear-ends somebody, YOUR policy pays first — collision deductible, liability, everything. Their insurance only kicks in as excess coverage if your limits run out. Translation: be picky about who drives your vehicles.
"'Full coverage' means I'm covered for everything."
BUSTED. "Full coverage" is casual slang — not a real insurance product. It usually means liability + collision + comprehensive. It does NOT mean zero deductible, unlimited payouts, free rental cars, or coverage for everything under the sun. Your policy exclusions still absolutely apply.
"Older drivers always cost more to insure."
BUSTED. Actually the opposite in NC! State law specifically allows insurers to apply downward deviations in rates for drivers 55 and older, especially if they've completed a defensive driving course through AAA or AARP. Senior driver = often the BEST rate in the household.
"Stuff stolen from inside my car is covered by auto insurance."
BUSTED. Nope. Auto insurance covers the vehicle itself. But your laptop, golf clubs, phone, or groceries? That's your homeowners or renters policy. Comprehensive coverage pays for the broken window — not what was taken through it.
10 Ways to Escape the Myth Trap in 2026
Alright, you're myth-free. Now let's put that knowledge to work. Here are ten specific moves to make sure you're not overpaying — or underprotected — this year.
Read your declarations page
Pull your policy out and actually read the dec page line by line. Know what you're paying for before assuming.
Verify NC-specific rules
NC prohibits gender-based auto rating and limits credit scoring. Don't fall for national myths that don't apply here.
Check your flood zone
Visit FEMA's Flood Map Service Center and look up your home address. Even "low-risk" zones flood.
Schedule valuables
If you own rings, Rolexes, cameras, or collectibles worth over $1,500, add a scheduled personal property endorsement.
Add rideshare or business use
If you drive for Uber, DoorDash, or use your car for business, you need the right endorsement — personal auto won't cover you.
Ask your agent to define "full coverage"
Get specific on your deductibles, limits, and exclusions. Don't assume what "full" means.
Confirm borrow-a-car rules
Know that YOUR policy pays first if someone borrows your car. Choose who drives your vehicle carefully.
Photograph your car interior
If stuff gets stolen from your car, your homeowners or renters insurance covers it — but only if you can prove ownership.
Compare quotes every 6-12 months
With 2026 rate shifts, shopping independently is the single easiest way to beat myth-based overpaying.
Talk to a local NC agent
Independent agents like me know NC's quirky rules inside and out. Call us at 336-835-1993.
Ready to Stop Paying for Myths?
Now that we've busted the top 10 insurance myths floating around Surry County, let's make sure YOUR policy actually fits your real life — not somebody's Thanksgiving-table folklore. Right here in Elkin NC, families who get this stuff right save hundreds every single year. You can too!
Give me a call, send an email, or pop by the office on N. Bridge Street. I'll pull free quotes from Nationwide, Progressive, Travelers, and more, and we'll sort fact from fiction together — no pressure, no jargon.
Bill Layne Insurance Agency · 1283 N Bridge St, Elkin, NC 28621 · NC License #6571216
Frequently Asked Questions
Do red cars really cost more to insure in North Carolina?
No. The color of your car has zero impact on your NC auto insurance premium. Insurers rate your car based on make, model, engine size, safety features, theft rates, repair costs, and your driving record — not paint color. Your neighbor's candy-apple-red Mustang and their tan Camry at identical trim levels will cost the same to insure.
Do women pay less for car insurance in North Carolina?
Not in NC. North Carolina General Statute 58-36-10 flat-out prohibits insurers from using age or gender as a rating factor for private passenger auto insurance. NC is one of only a handful of states (along with California, Hawaii, Massachusetts, Montana, and Pennsylvania) with this ban. A 25-year-old woman and a 25-year-old man with identical driving records will pay the exact same rate here.
Does my NC homeowners insurance cover flooding?
No. Standard homeowners policies in NC exclude flood damage entirely. Flooding — whether from hurricane remnants, river overflow, or storm surge — requires a separate flood policy through the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) or a private flood carrier. Given Hurricane Helene's devastation in western NC in 2024, this is the single most important myth for Surry County homeowners to understand.
If someone borrows my car and wrecks it, whose insurance pays?
Yours, usually. In North Carolina and most states, auto insurance follows the car — not the driver. If you give a friend permission to borrow your car and they cause an accident, your policy pays first. Their insurance only kicks in as secondary coverage if your limits are exhausted. That means their bad day costs you a deductible and a possible rate hike at renewal.
Does "full coverage" really mean I'm covered for everything?
Not even close. "Full coverage" is an informal term that typically means liability + collision + comprehensive. It does not mean unlimited payouts, zero deductibles, or automatic rental car reimbursement. Your deductibles, coverage limits, and policy exclusions still apply. Items stolen from your car aren't covered by auto insurance at all — they fall under your homeowners or renters policy.
Conclusion
- Color doesn't affect your NC rate, and women don't pay less than men here — NC prohibits gender-based auto rating by statute.
- Standard homeowners insurance NEVER covers floods. If you don't have a separate flood policy, now is the time to get quoted.
- Insurance follows the car, not the driver. Your policy pays first if you lend your vehicle — be selective.
- Bill Layne Insurance runs free, honest comparisons across Nationwide, Progressive, Travelers, and more so you see real numbers instead of rumors.