June 19, 2026 8:53 am EDT
|

It is comforting to know you will never miss a car insurance renewal. That auto-renewal checkbox is wonderful for your insurer, too. Easy for you means you stay with them.

The thing is, staying put could be costing you. Fifteen minutes once a year to compare options is often all that stands between your current renewal price and a lower one.

Your state sets the starting price

Two drivers with identical records and identical cars can pay very different prices simply because of the state on their license. Insurers price a region based on specific risks — how busy the roads are, how often cars get stolen, what the weather does, how many drivers carry no coverage at all, and what each state requires you to buy in the first place.

For example, Florida sits among the most expensive states in the country, and the reasons stack up: a no-fault system that requires personal injury protection, heavy hurricane exposure, dense traffic and one of the highest shares of uninsured drivers anywhere.

Texas, Arizona and Georgia have the weather to blame. Hail, monsoon flooding and violent spring storms can result in comprehensive claims, which are reflected in premiums for everyone. Virginia drivers carry the cost of the crowded northern Virginia commute and the rising price of repairing modern cars.

On the other hand, Illinois runs below the national average. Although, if you park in Chicago, dense traffic and vehicle theft narrow that advantage in a hurry.

The point is that every state influences your starting number before you even get in the driver’s seat.

These differences can change year-on-year, which is exactly why you should compare car insurance at least every year at or before renewal.

The number worth knowing

Even in your own state, that starting number is not fixed. Each insurer weighs your age, your ZIP code, your credit, your car and your record using its own formula. The same coverage for the same driver can carry very different prices from one company to the next.

An analysis of the 2025 market found prices actually fell 6% nationally, to an average of $2,144 a year, but the relief was wildly uneven — costs are heading up in 35 states and down in 15.

According to a J.D. Power study, 53% of customers comparison shopped their auto policy in the past year, but that still leaves nearly half who did not.

What to actually do about it

Compare at least three carriers, and make sure every quote uses the same liability limits and deductibles. Do it at renewal, and again any time your life circumstances change: a move, a paid-off car, a new driver on the policy, a milestone birthday.

Technology means it is easier and faster than it used to be, and failing to do this may mean you are leaving easy savings on the table. Next time you see your auto-renewal come through, make it an opportunity to look for better rates.

Read the full article here

Share.
Leave A Reply

Exit mobile version