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Hit by a Snowbird or Out-of-State Driver in Fort Myers? Here’s Whose Insurance Actually Pays

Close-up view from inside a car showing a driver’s hand

Every winter, Southwest Florida’s roads fill up. Crash volume in the region climbs roughly 40% between late January and early April, and March is reliably the worst month on Florida’s roads, with over 34,000 crashes statewide in March 2024 alone. So the scenario is common: you get hit in Fort Myers or North Port by a driver with Michigan plates, or a New Yorker in a rental car, and the first question is the right one. Whose insurance pays for this?

The answer is layered, and it is rarely “the other driver’s policy, obviously.” Here is how coverage actually sorts itself out after a crash with an out-of-state driver, whichever side of it you’re on.

First things first: in Florida, your own PIP pays before anyone else’s

Florida is a no-fault state. Your own Personal Injury Protection (PIP) coverage pays first, regardless of who caused the crash: 80% of your medical bills and 60% of lost wages, up to $10,000. You must start treatment within 14 days of the crash or PIP can refuse to pay at all.

This surprises people every season. Even when a visitor from Ohio is plainly at fault, your claim starts with your own insurer. We explain the system in detail in our guide to Florida’s no-fault rules, but the short version is: see a doctor inside 14 days, open your PIP claim, and only then worry about the other driver’s coverage.

The other driver’s insurance enters the picture for what PIP doesn’t cover: serious injuries, pain and suffering, and everything beyond the $10,000 cap.

Collection of US state license plates — snowbird and out-of-state drivers in Florida

You’re the local, hit by an out-of-state driver

Once your injuries cross Florida’s “serious injury” threshold, you pursue the at-fault driver’s bodily-injury liability coverage. With a visitor, that means a policy written in another state, and three complications follow.

Their policy follows them to Florida. A New York or Ontario policy still covers its driver here. The catch is the limits: some states allow liability minimums lower than your actual damages, and the visitor may carry no more than their home-state floor.

Their state may have no PIP at all. Most states are fault-based and don’t use PIP. That changes nothing about your own PIP claim, but it means the visitor’s insurer handles the claim under liability rules, often more adversarially.

They might be uninsured. Out-of-state minimums can be shockingly thin, and some visitors drive effectively uninsured for Florida purposes. This is where your own uninsured/underinsured motorist (UM/UIM) coverage earns its premium. If you skipped UM to save money, a snowbird crash is the scenario that punishes the choice. We covered the mechanics in what to do if you’re hit by an uninsured driver in Florida.

The rental-car trap: why you usually can’t sue Enterprise, Hertz, or Avis

Many winter visitors drive rentals, and injured locals assume the rental giant’s deep pockets are available. They usually aren’t. A federal law called the Graves Amendment (49 U.S.C. § 30106) shields vehicle-rental companies from vicarious liability for crashes caused by their customers. Renting the car out is not enough to make the company pay.

The exceptions are narrow and fact-driven: the company’s own negligence, such as renting out a car with bald tires or ignored recalls, or negligent entrustment, like handing keys to a visibly impaired driver. Absent that, your claim runs against the renter personally, their own auto policy, any coverage they bought at the rental counter, and your UM/UIM.

You’re the snowbird: does your northern policy even work down here?

Aerial view of a Florida road intersection where out-of-state crash claims are common

Now the mirror image. You winter in North Port, your car is insured in Pennsylvania, and you get into a crash here. Two traps matter.

The 90-day rule. Florida law requires a vehicle that stays in the state more than 90 days per year (counted cumulatively, not consecutively) to be registered and insured in Florida with Florida PIP. Seasonal residents who keep northern-only coverage past that window are driving out of compliance, and their insurer knows it.

The garaging trap. Insurers price policies based on where the car actually lives. If your policy says the car is garaged in Pittsburgh but it spends five months a year in Sarasota County, the insurer can treat that as misrepresentation, and contested claims have been denied over it. Tell your insurer about your winter address. The premium difference is far cheaper than a denied claim.

One more myth: many snowbirds assume their policy’s “out-of-state coverage” clause automatically converts their coverage to meet Florida’s no-fault rules. Florida appellate courts have rejected that argument in recent decisions, holding that these broadening clauses generally do not obligate a northern insurer to pay Florida’s $10,000 PIP benefit. If you’re here past the threshold, you need an actual Florida policy, not an assumption.

Who pays first: a quick decision map

ScenarioFirst payerThenWatch out for 
Local hit by insured visitorYour FL PIPVisitor’s home-state liability policyLow out-of-state limits
Local hit by uninsured visitorYour FL PIPYour UM/UIM coverageSkipped UM = no second layer
Local hit by visitor in rentalYour FL PIPRenter’s personal policy + counter coverageGraves Amendment blocks suing the rental company
Snowbird (FL-compliant policy) hit hereYour FL PIPAt-fault driver’s liabilityThe 14-day treatment rule
Snowbird with northern-only policyHome-state policy per its termsAt-fault driver’s liability90-day rule, garaging misrepresentation

They drove home before the claim settled. Can you still sue?

Yes. Snowbird defendants leave in April, and adjusters sometimes use that to slow-walk claims, hoping you’ll take less. Florida planned for this decades ago. Under Florida Statute 48.171, any nonresident who drives in Florida automatically appoints the Secretary of State as their agent for service of process in crash lawsuits. Their flight home does not take the case with them; your lawsuit can be served in Tallahassee and proceed in a Florida court under Florida law.

The practical limit is the clock. Florida’s statute of limitations for negligence claims is two years, and cross-state claims take longer to work up: out-of-state adjusters, records in two states, a defendant a thousand miles away. Starting early matters more here than in an ordinary local crash.

Damaged vehicle after a collision with a rental or out-of-state driver in Fort Myers, Florida

Crashed with an out-of-state driver in Lee or Sarasota County?

Cross-state crashes reward whoever organizes the coverage layers first: PIP, the visitor’s policy, rental coverage, UM/UIM, in the right order, before the defendant is three states away. Kremenchuker Law Group handles these car accident claims for Fort Myers and North Port residents and seasonal visitors alike, in English and Russian. The consultation costs nothing, and in a snowbird case, the calendar is genuinely against you.

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Frequently asked questions

Whose insurance pays when an out-of-state driver hits you in Florida?
Your own PIP pays first, covering 80% of medical bills up to $10,000, because Florida is no-fault. Beyond that, you claim against the at-fault visitor's home-state liability policy, and against your own UM/UIM coverage if they're uninsured or underinsured.
Can I sue the rental company if the at-fault driver was in a rental car?
Generally no. The federal Graves Amendment shields rental companies from liability for their customers' crashes. Exceptions exist only where the company itself was negligent, such as renting a defective vehicle or entrusting a car to a visibly unfit driver.
Do snowbirds need Florida car insurance?
Yes, once their vehicle is in Florida more than 90 days in a year, counted cumulatively. Past that point the car must be registered in Florida with Florida PIP. Relying on a northern policy's "out-of-state coverage" clause does not satisfy the requirement.
What if the driver who hit me already left Florida?
You can still sue. Florida Statute 48.171 makes the Secretary of State the agent for serving nonresident motorists, so the lawsuit proceeds in Florida courts even if the defendant is back in Ontario or Ohio.
Does my insurance go up if a snowbird hits me and it wasn't my fault?
Florida law prohibits insurers from raising rates solely because of a not-at-fault accident. Your PIP claim through your own policy does not change that protection.

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