車子掉進天坑(路面塌陷)保險會賠嗎?Collision vs Comprehensive 一次搞懂 Car Fell into a Sinkhole at a Red Light — Is It Collision or Comprehensive

車子停紅燈突然掉進天坑,保險會賠嗎?Collision vs Comprehensive 一次搞懂

(本文為保險常識分享,非法律或理賠承諾;實際以保單條款與保險公司核保/理賠結果為準。)

最近看到一則新聞:兩輛車在路口等紅燈時,路面突然塌陷,車子整台往下掉。很多人第一反應是:「這算不算 Collision(碰撞險)?」

答案通常是:更可能是 Comprehensive(綜合險/非碰撞事故),而不是 Collision。

先記住一句話:Collision = 你撞到東西;Comprehensive = 東西(或事件)砸到你

  • Collision(碰撞險):車子因為駕駛行為或行進間事故,撞到 其他車、牆、護欄、電線桿,或翻車等。
  • Comprehensive(綜合險/非碰撞)不是碰撞造成、而是外在突發事件導致車損,例如天坑、路面塌陷、落石、樹倒、冰雹、火災、失竊、動物撞擊等。

停紅燈路面塌陷,通常歸類在哪一種?

若車子是在正常停等(或低速行駛)時,地面突然塌陷把車「吞下去」,多數理賠實務會把它視為非碰撞型的突發事件,因此更常見的歸類是 Comprehensive

但如果事故後續被判定為「先撞到路障/護欄/其他車」才造成主要損害,也可能出現 Collision 介入的情境。關鍵在於:主要損害原因是什麼

會不會賠?看你有沒有買到「會賠自己的車」的保障

  • 只有 Liability(責任險):通常不賠自己的車,只賠你對別人的責任。
  • 有 Comprehensive:通常可走綜合險,扣除你的 deductible(自付額) 後理賠。
  • 有 Collision:若被判定屬於碰撞事故,則走碰撞險,同樣會扣自付額。

那政府/道路單位要不要負責?

很多人會問:「路塌了是道路單位的錯嗎?」實務上要看原因:

  • 若是自然塌陷或不可預期的地下空洞:未必能追究到政府責任。
  • 若牽涉施工疏失、下水道破裂未修、或已知危險未警示:可能存在求償空間。

常見流程是:車主先用自己的保險把車修好/處理全損,後續若有第三方責任,可能由保險公司透過 subrogation(代位求償) 再去追償。

遇到路面塌陷事故,你可以先做這幾件事

  1. 先確保人身安全,必要時立刻報警或請求救援。
  2. 拍照/錄影:路況、塌陷範圍、警示牌(有無)、車輛位置、車損細節。
  3. 保留證據:拖吊與修車收據、警方報告號碼、目擊者聯絡方式。
  4. 盡快報案(claim):提供時間地點與事故描述,讓理賠人員判定適用保障。

結論:這種「天坑吞車」多半是 Comprehensive,不是 Collision

如果你希望自己的車在「非碰撞事故」也有保障,通常需要同時具備 Comprehensive(必要時加上 Collision)這類保障。建議你每年檢視一次保單:你現在的自付額是多少?你真的希望這種事件發生時能被保護到嗎?

免責聲明:本文為一般性資訊分享,不構成保險建議、法律意見或理賠承諾。請以你的保單條款與保險公司理賠結果為準。


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Car Fell into a Sinkhole at a Red Light — Will Insurance Pay? Collision vs. Comprehensive Explained

(This article is for general insurance education only. It is not legal advice or a claim guarantee. Coverage depends on your policy terms and the insurer’s claim determination.)

You may have seen a news clip where cars were stopped at a traffic light and the roadway suddenly collapsed, sending the vehicles down into a sinkhole. A common question is: “Is this covered under Collision?”

In many cases, the better fit is actually Comprehensive (non-collision coverage), not Collision.

One simple rule: Collision = you hit something; Comprehensive = something (or an event) hits you

  • Collision Coverage: Damage caused by your vehicle colliding with another vehicle or object (guardrail, pole, wall), or by overturning.
  • Comprehensive Coverage: Damage caused by non-collision events such as sinkholes/road collapse, falling objects, hail, fire, theft, vandalism, or animal strikes.

So where does a sudden road collapse usually fall?

If your car is stopped (or moving normally) and the pavement suddenly collapses beneath you, many claim scenarios treat this as a sudden, external, non-collision event—typically pointing to Comprehensive.

However, if the primary damage is determined to come from a secondary impact (for example, hitting a barrier or another vehicle), Collision may be involved. The key is: what was the primary cause of damage?

Will it pay? It depends on whether you carry coverage for your own vehicle

  • Liability Only: Generally does not cover your own vehicle—it covers damage/injury you cause to others.
  • Comprehensive: Often applies in sinkhole/road-collapse scenarios, subject to your deductible.
  • Collision: Applies if the loss is determined to be collision-based, also subject to deductible.

What about the city/state being responsible?

People often ask whether the road authority is at fault. It depends on the cause:

  • Natural or unforeseeable ground failure: liability may be difficult to establish.
  • Construction negligence, broken infrastructure left unrepaired, or known hazards without warning: there may be a path to recovery.

A common real-world flow is: you file under your own policy first, and if a third party is responsible, your insurer may pursue subrogation to recover the payout.

If this happens, do these things first

  1. Prioritize safety and call emergency services if needed.
  2. Document everything: photos/videos of the scene, sinkhole area, signage (or lack of it), vehicle position, and visible damage.
  3. Keep records: tow receipts, repair estimates, police report number, and witness contacts.
  4. File a claim promptly and provide a clear timeline and location details.

Bottom line

A “sinkhole swallowed my car” scenario is often treated as Comprehensive rather than Collision. If you want your vehicle protected from non-collision surprises, review whether you carry Comprehensive (and the deductible level you’re comfortable with) each year.

Disclaimer: This content is general information only and does not constitute insurance advice, legal advice, or a promise of coverage. Always refer to your policy language and your insurer’s claim determination.