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Why car insurance rates are so high: ou’re paying a lot more for car insurance than you were in 2020. Here’s why.
Vox ^ | 03/22/2024 | Marin Cogan

Posted on 03/22/2024 9:37:19 PM PDT by SeekAndFind

If you pay for car insurance, you’ve probably noticed that rates are really high lately. You’re not alone.

Last week’s Consumer Price Index (CPI) report — the government’s method for tracking what people are paying for goods and services and how that’s changing over time — noted that the price of car insurance was up more than 20 percent over the same time last year. What’s particularly painful is that rates were already rising: CPI reports have shown that, overall, car insurance rates are up more than 38 percent since January 2020.

What’s going on? The big insurance companies have been relatively quiet about what’s driving rates up.

Inflation is definitely a big part of the equation. Everything now costs more, including cars and car repairs, and insurance companies are passing those costs on to consumers.

But industry insiders and experts I spoke with say there are a few under-the-radar trends also driving rates up, and they relate to the subjects I cover at Vox, so let’s dive in.

We’re driving more dangerously

One reason rates are up is that driving became much more dangerous during the pandemic. People started engaging in risky behaviors like speeding and using their phones while driving more.

“Since Covid, we saw this incredible increase in distracted driving,” says Ryan McMahon, senior vice president of strategy for Cambridge Mobile Telematics. “You could almost track it by the day schools started to shut down.”

He’s not just speculating: CMT has access to driver data for millions of drivers, who download apps via their insurance companies that measure things like speeding, hard braking, and cellphone use while driving. McMahon told me that the huge jump they saw in distracted behaviors during the pandemic hasn’t come down since.

Maybe not surprisingly, the number of fatal accidents spiked; so did the severity of auto insurance claims, meaning cars came in severely damaged and requiring expensive repairs.

Costs keep rising

While drivers were getting more dangerous, law enforcement in many parts of the country began pulling back on traffic safety enforcement, likely due to Covid-related staff shortages and criticisms over racial biases following the murder of George Floyd.

Traffic enforcement has always been a deeply imperfect mode of safety enforcement, one that leaves Black drivers susceptible to racial biases from law enforcement. But it’s also one of the factors insurance companies use to determine individual rates.

“Ultimately, without traffic violation data, insurers aren’t able to accurately assess and underwrite a driver’s risk. With the compounding cost from accidents, carriers are now increasing rates for everyone, meaning we are all paying for this problem,” Mark McElroy, executive vice president and head of TransUnion’s insurance business, said in a recent report.

Cars have also become more technologically advanced, making car repair more expensive.

Think of a car made in 2004 versus a car made in 2024. If the two crashed, the car from 2024 would probably be more expensive to fix because it’s more likely to have advanced technology like backup cameras and lane sensors.

According to one report by industry analysts CCC, the average estimate for a front-end claim in 2022 was $3,706, up more than 15 percent over the year before. Vehicles more than seven years old, meanwhile, were over $1,000 less to repair.

When does it end?

This is, needless to say, not good news for consumers.

The price of new cars has grown so much that they’re practically unaffordable for middle-class consumers now, and these rising costs hit low-income people even harder. It’s particularly difficult because for many, a car is often an essential means of keeping a good job.

So they’re stuck with a kind of Catch-22: They can’t live with the rising costs of car ownership, but they can’t live without them, either. And their rates are already likely to be higher if they have poor credit or live in a high-crime neighborhood. “The people least able to afford it are paying the highest amount,” said the industry insider.

The good news — if you can call it that — is that experts don’t think rates will keep growing so much over the next year.

“You had this problem where the insurance companies fell behind, so the prices didn’t match the costs and they were losing a bunch of money,” another insider told me. Rates rose in an attempt by insurance companies to catch up with costs, but now inflation isn’t growing at the same runaway clip and insurers aren’t seeing the same levels of loss.

“Costs shouldn’t be as high as last year,” he said.



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: auto; autoinsurance; automobiles; automotive; bidenflation; car; carinsurance; cars; cost; distracted; georgefloyd; inflation; insurance; lawenforcement; pandemic; recklessdriving; technology; trafficviolations; wecantbreeathe; wrecks
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To: BobL

That could very well be part of the problem.


81 posted on 03/23/2024 8:33:29 AM PDT by Gaffer
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To: Jonty30

Agree. Also, there are a LOT of struggling Americans who have silently just said “f@*k it,” I’ll gamble it and go without.


82 posted on 03/23/2024 8:35:01 AM PDT by Gaffer
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To: SeekAndFind

Oh boy…here we go! With the US siding and funding Ukraine, we will get drawn into this World War III battle ….stupid stupid SOB Uniparty! And guess whose children will be drafted or forced to fight their wars, while they get richer and richer and line their pockets with money that supposedly goes to funding their Ukraine war. It’s your sons and daughters and my children who will die in a foreign battlefield that was not meant to be fought! Compliments of the DC swamp, effing RINOS and the dirty evil bastard rats! Along with a blessing of the pentagon woke generals! None of them will fight this war in the frontlines. It’s gonna be our children doing the dirty work for them. It’s time for us to flip the finger to the DC Bastards and say effing no way!


83 posted on 03/23/2024 9:24:05 AM PDT by RoseofTexas
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To: TermLimits4All

“Insurance paid her off to the tune of 86k.”

Then I must be an outlier as my final payout was a measly 5k.
Uninsured idjit smacked us while we were stopped in traffic at about 40 mph. Saw it coming and braced for impact. Knocked the radio completely out of the dash as well as bent the RR frame. Took the ins. co. about 4 years to finalize. TFB was the culprit and they were “fired” shortly thereafter. F’n insurance companies DO NOT have your best interests in mind regardless of how long you paid their premiums which was about 35 years.


84 posted on 03/23/2024 9:43:42 AM PDT by LastDayz (A blunt and brazen Texan. I will not be assimilated.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Not a word about massive orgainzed crime car theft shipping stolen cars over seas.

Not a word about the epidimic of domestic car theft to use cars in crime or to smash into store fronts for robberies.

Not a word about traffic accidents by drunk illegal aliens without a license or insurance.


85 posted on 03/23/2024 9:51:55 AM PDT by Freedom_Is_Not_Free (America -- July 4, 1776 to November 3, 2020 -- R.I.P.)
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To: BobL

That is the case in California, which has the highest proportion of EV’s to other cars in the country.


86 posted on 03/23/2024 10:26:13 AM PDT by Thud
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To: Jonty30
They are also hiding that the people driving more dangerously are unlicensed illegals.

And a lot of unlicensed, uninsured, unregistered Americans, especially the melanin enhanced ones in my area.

This is partly the skyrocketing cost of insurance and auto registration and the utter lack of law enforcement.

87 posted on 03/23/2024 12:12:55 PM PDT by pierrem15 ("Massacrez-les, car le seigneur connait les siens" )
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To: SeekAndFind

I’m with the “illegals are driving up the cost” crowd (no pun intended).
In the early 2000’s I spent about a year in Puerto Rico on a large construction poject, and the one thing that I remember is how crazy many of their drivers were.

When the cultural differences are many, you can not expect things like driving to be the same in other countries as they are here.


88 posted on 03/23/2024 12:23:53 PM PDT by FMBass (Que sais Je)
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To: pierrem15

89 posted on 03/23/2024 12:27:18 PM PDT by Dick Bachert (TH)
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To: LastDayz

Yep. My daughter’s accident sucked. First off it was graduation day for my daughter and she was driving her grandmother back to the hotel.
First red flag was when the lady was “worried we didn’t have insurance”. It’s really hard not to be biased against black people, as their actions warrant that bias.


90 posted on 03/23/2024 12:33:40 PM PDT by TermLimits4All ("If you stand for nothing, you'll fall for anything.")
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To: Alberta's Child

Even the legal drugs cause problems. I know an opioid user that’s been in more than his fair share of car accidents. Yes he has a prescription.


91 posted on 03/23/2024 6:23:13 PM PDT by brianl703
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To: Alberta's Child

Interesting, but sad.


92 posted on 03/24/2024 3:44:30 PM PDT by mbj
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To: grey_whiskers

+1


93 posted on 03/24/2024 3:45:16 PM PDT by mbj
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To: mewzilla

+1

(Avoid New York)


94 posted on 03/24/2024 3:52:01 PM PDT by mbj
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To: mewzilla

+1


95 posted on 03/24/2024 3:52:24 PM PDT by mbj
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To: Pollard

Yes, because your old vehicles just might be involved in an accident with the more prevalent NEW vehicles.

Insurance rates do have a lot to do with actuaries. (And uninsured drivers.)


96 posted on 03/24/2024 3:55:14 PM PDT by mbj
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To: ealgeone

+1


97 posted on 03/24/2024 3:55:46 PM PDT by mbj
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To: pfflier

+1


98 posted on 03/24/2024 3:57:02 PM PDT by mbj
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To: SeekAndFind

Over the years I have been in 2 car accidents. Both times hit from behind by illegal - mexico / India HB1.

I sold one car to gas station and that guy sold it to an illegal but left my name on the title.... that illegal was pulled over by the sheriff and the car impounded. The impound lot wanted me to pay the storage!!

My cousin had nearly the same issue. The sheriff I talked to says this happens all the time....


99 posted on 03/24/2024 4:41:29 PM PDT by minnesota_bound (Need more money to buy everything now)
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