Deductible benchmarks
Modeled deductible scenarios and early decision patterns.
Explore common deductible trade-offs across insurance types, premium savings, break-even time, emergency fund comfort, and claim likelihood.
Trust note: This page currently uses modeled examples based on common deductible scenarios, combined with any benchmark-eligible anonymous calculator data. Modeled examples are not presented as real user behavior.
Common break-even ranges
See how long a higher deductible may need to stay claim-free before the premium savings cover the extra out-of-pocket risk.
Risk comfort patterns
Compare how emergency fund comfort, claim likelihood, and risk tolerance affect the result category.
Insurance type insights
Review how deductible trade-offs differ across auto, home, renters, and other insurance comparisons.
How to read these benchmark charts
The benchmark charts are designed to show common deductible trade-offs, not to tell you which policy to choose. They compare patterns such as premium savings, extra deductible risk, break-even time, emergency fund comfort, and expected claim likelihood.
For example, a short break-even time may suggest that the higher deductible becomes financially attractive faster, assuming no claims occur during that period. A long break-even time may suggest that the premium savings are too small compared with the extra deductible risk.
The charts can also help explain why two people with the same deductible options may reach different results. Someone with a strong emergency fund and low expected claim likelihood may be more comfortable with a higher deductible. Someone with limited cash reserves or higher expected claim likelihood may prefer the lower deductible.
Modeled examples vs. real anonymous submissions
Some benchmark rows are modeled examples. These are synthetic scenarios created to show how the calculator behaves across realistic deductible situations. They are useful for explaining the tool, testing chart behavior, and giving visitors a clear starting point before enough real calculator submissions are available.
Modeled examples are separated from real anonymous calculator submissions inside the DeductibleWise data structure. This matters because modeled examples should not be presented as real user behavior. As more real anonymous calculator submissions are collected, DeductibleWise can show stronger public patterns while keeping individual reports private.
Benchmark preview
The charts below are generated from benchmark-eligible rows in the DeductibleWise database. Synthetic rows are labeled as modeled examples, so they stay separate from real anonymous calculator submissions.
DeductibleWise benchmark preview
Modeled deductible scenarios and early anonymous calculator patterns
These charts are based on benchmark-eligible rows. Synthetic seed rows are labeled as modeled examples based on common deductible scenarios. As real anonymous calculator submissions grow, the dataset can be separated or blended transparently.
Result distribution
Insurance type mix
Dataset source
Emergency fund comfort
Expected claim likelihood
Common deductible jumps
| Jump | Count | Avg. break-even |
|---|---|---|
| 500 → 1000 | 67 | 11.5y |
| 250 → 1000 | 36 | 10.4y |
| 500 → 1500 | 23 | 29.7y |
| 500 → 2500 | 22 | 59.8y |
| 1000 → 2500 | 15 | 12.3y |
| 1000 → 5000 | 13 | 15.4y |
| 250 → 500 | 9 | 8.5y |
| 100 → 250 | 7 | 0.8y |
Average trade-off by insurance type
| Type | Rows | Avg. annual savings | Avg. extra risk | Avg. break-even |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Auto insurance | 74 | 388 | 730 | 3.1y |
| Home insurance | 57 | 312 | 1,886 | 7.7y |
| Renters insurance | 56 | 87 | 890 | 49.9y |
| Other insurance | 50 | 159 | 688 | 6.8y |
Trust note: Modeled examples are not presented as real user behavior. Public wording should say “modeled examples based on common deductible scenarios” until there is enough real anonymous submission volume to publish real-user benchmarks separately.
How benchmark data is used
DeductibleWise publishes broad statistical summaries, not individual user records. The goal is to help visitors understand common trade-offs between premium savings, deductible risk, emergency fund comfort, and expected claim likelihood.
Benchmark data may include modeled examples, anonymous calculator submissions, or both. Modeled examples are used as a baseline to make the page useful from the beginning. Real anonymous submissions may be used only in grouped form, such as result distributions, average break-even ranges, or common deductible comparison patterns.
The benchmark page does not publish names, emails, phone numbers, addresses, policy numbers, insurer names, or personal report links. The purpose is to show high-level decision patterns, not to expose individual scenarios.
These benchmarks are educational. They can help you understand how different deductible choices behave in common scenarios, but they do not replace your own policy terms, coverage details, claim history, or advice from a qualified professional.
Compare your own deductible options
Use the deductible calculator to compare premium savings, extra deductible risk, and break-even time for your own scenario.