A personal umbrella policy is the single most underused insurance product among middle-class Georgia families. It costs about as much as a streaming subscription and covers liability up to $1M, $2M, or $5M above your auto and home policies. Almost no one buys one until they wish they had.
What an umbrella actually does
It's exactly what the name suggests: it sits above your existing auto and home liability coverage. When those policies max out, the umbrella picks up the rest, up to its limit.
Example: you cause a multi-car accident. The other party's medical bills and car damage total $400K. Your auto liability is $250K. Without an umbrella, you're personally on the hook for $150K — meaning savings, retirement accounts, home equity, future wages can all be garnished.
With a $1M umbrella: the umbrella covers the $150K gap, plus another $850K in headroom if the lawsuit grows.
What it covers (broader than you think)
- Auto accidents where you're at fault and damages exceed your auto policy
- Slip-and-fall at your home that exceeds your homeowners liability
- Dog bite claims (massive in Georgia — average payout $50K+)
- Defamation, libel, slander — yes, including social media posts
- Boat or watercraft incidents
- Coaching youth sports liability if you're sued
- Rental property liability (separate landlord policies cover the property; umbrella covers you)
What it doesn't cover
- Your own property damage (umbrella is liability-only)
- Intentional acts
- Business activities (you need commercial umbrella for that)
- Specific exclusions vary — owning a trampoline, certain dog breeds, or a pool can create gaps
The math
For most metro Atlanta families with one home and 2 cars and clean records, a $1M umbrella runs $200–300/year. A $2M umbrella runs $300–450/year. The increase per million drops fast — buying $5M is rarely more than $700/year.
Compare to: average legal-defense costs alone for a serious liability claim run $20K–50K, before any settlement. Umbrellas pay both the settlement and the legal defense.
The "underlying limits" trap
Most umbrella carriers require minimum underlying liability limits — usually $250K/500K on auto and $300K on home. If your current limits are lower, you have to bump them first. The good news: bumping auto from $100K to $250K typically only adds $50–100/year, since the marginal cost of higher limits is small.
Who actually needs one
Anyone with assets worth protecting — meaning home equity, retirement savings, college funds, or anticipated future income. If you have any of those, an umbrella protects them. The classic profile: dual-income households with $200K+ net worth, two drivers, and kids approaching driving age.
Real numbers
A Norcross family of four with two cars, a home, and modest investments: $1M umbrella, $260/year. They've had it for 11 years and never used it. They also haven't lost a single night of sleep over what would happen if their teen rear-ends a Tesla on I-85. That's the product.