Time Trials: “SCCA Time Trials: Is this Competition?”

You signed up for the “SCCA Time Trials National Tour.” It sounds like fun. You aren’t racing wheel-to-wheel; you are just trying to set a fast lap. You crash. The insurer denies the claim because the event had “Time” in the name and published a winner.

Key Takeaways

  • The Name Matters: If the event is called a “Race,” “Contest,” or “Time Trial,” automatic flags are raised.
  • Competition Exclusion: Standard track policies exclude “Competition.” Time Trials are often defined as competition because there is a winner and a podium.
  • Specific Endorsements: Some insurers sell a “Time Trial” rider. You pay extra (~20%) to cover this specific activity.
  • The “Solo” Exception: Some policies allow time trials if there is only one car on track at a time (rare now).

The “Why” (The Trap): “Contest of Speed”

The exclusion language is broad:

“We do not cover any loss occurring during a race, contest, or demonstration of speed.”

SCCA Time Trials have classes, points, and trophies. That is a contest. Even if you are slow, you are in a contest.

The Investigation: Who covers TT?

I called the underwriters.

OpenTrack

  • Stance: They have historically been the most TT-friendly. Their policy often defines “Competition” as wheel-to-wheel racing (racing other cars directly). Racing the clock is often allowed.
  • Verification: You MUST check the 2026 policy definition of “Competition.”

Lockton / RLI

  • Stance: They have a specific checkbox for “Time Trial.” If you check it and pay the surcharge, you are covered. If you check “HPDE” and run a TT, you are denied.

Hagerty

  • Stance: Generally stricter on timed events. They prefer HPDE (Education).

Comparison Table: Event Eligibility

Event TypeCoverage StatusNotes
HPDE (Point-by Passing)CoveredStandard rate
Track Day (Open Passing)CoveredStandard rate
Time Trial (Transponders)Check PolicyOften requires surcharge
Club Racing (Wheel-to-Wheel)DeniedRequires true “Race Car” insurance

[IMAGE: Photo of an SCCA Time Trial podium celebration]

Step-by-Step Action Plan

  1. Read the Event Rulebook: Does the event declare “Winners”? If yes, it’s a contest.
  2. Select the Right Activity: When buying the policy, if it asks “Is this a Time Trial?”, say YES. Do not lie.
  3. Pay the Extra: It might cost $100 more. Pay it.
  4. Keep the Timesheets: If you crash during practice (untimed) vs. the timed session, it might matter. Keep the schedule.

FAQ

Is Autocross covered?
Autocross (cones in a parking lot) is usually excluded by standard auto insurance now, and track insurance often ignores it unless you buy a specific policy. However, the speeds and risks are lower.

What if I’m just running the transponder for fun?
If the event is an HPDE, and you use a transponder, you are usually fine. If the event is a Time Trial, you are not.

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