Nitrous: “Nitrous Bottle in Car: Immediate Policy Cancellation?”

I got into a minor fender bender (not my fault). When the adjuster came to look at the bumper, he saw a 10lb NOS bottle in the back seat. He took a photo. Three days later, I received a “Notice of Cancellation” for “Unacceptable Risk: Racing Equipment.” They paid the bumper claim, but I was dropped and blacklisted.

Key Takeaways

  • Nitrous = Racing: To an insurer, there is no “street use” for Nitrous Oxide. It implies racing. It is an automatic “Do Not Insure” for standard carriers.
  • Prohibited List: Most underwriting guidelines list “Nitrous Oxide Systems” alongside “Roll Cages” and “Parachutes” as prohibited mods.
  • The “Purge” Defense: Some insurers allow the system if the bottle is removed or disconnected for street use, but having the bottle in the car during a crash is fatal to the policy.
  • Specialty Carriers Allow It: Hagerty/Grundy allow nitrous if you sign a “No Racing” warranty.

The “Why” (The Trap): Increase in Hazard

The policy allows cancellation if there is a “Substantial Increase in Hazard.”
Installing a system designed solely for short bursts of extreme speed is defined as a substantial increase in hazard.
Even if the bottle was closed, the presence of the system proves intent to drive aggressively.

[IMAGE: Photo of a Nitrous bottle bracket in a trunk]

The Investigation: I Called Them

I asked: “I have a show car with a Nitrous setup. Can I insure it?”

1. Progressive / Geico

  • Answer: “No.”
  • Quote: “We do not accept vehicles with nitrous oxide, even if disconnected.”

2. State Farm

  • Answer: Agent discretion.
  • Quote: “If it’s for show and the bottle is empty? Maybe. But if an underwriter sees it, they will likely cancel.”

3. Hagerty

  • Answer: “Yes.”
  • Condition: Accepted as a modification on a show/pleasure vehicle. They know you aren’t drag racing your insured classic (or at least, they trust you not to crash while doing it).

Comparison Table

StatusStandard PolicySpecialty Policy
Bottle InstalledCancellationAccepted
System Installed / No BottleRisk of CancellationAccepted
Purge Kit Only (Show)VariesAccepted

Step-by-Step Action Plan

  1. Remove the Bottle: For daily driving, take the bottle out. Leave the brackets. If you crash, “It’s a show car setup, the bottle isn’t here.”
  2. Disconnect the Line: If the adjuster inspects, show them the main feed line is disconnected at the solenoid.
  3. Switch to Specialty: If you run nitrous, you are playing with fire on a standard policy. Move to a carrier that allows mods.
  4. Don’t Lie: If they ask “Do you have nitrous?”, say yes. If you lie and they find the solenoid after a crash, they rescind the policy for fraud.

FAQ Section

Is it illegal to have nitrous on the street?
In many states, yes. Having the bottle connected on a public road is a violation. Insurance won’t cover illegal acts.

What if the bottle explodes?
If the car catches fire? Covered (Fire). But they will cancel you immediately after paying.

Can I hide it?
Adjusters know where to look (trunk, solenoids on intake). Don’t try to outsmart them.

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