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California drivers face climbing car insurance premiums


Over the past year, Oakland grocery store manager Ananda Neil has received updates on his auto insurance policy with mounting dread. When his six-month, per-mile policy for his 2022 Hyundai Santa Fe renewed in October 2023, it edged up from $77.19 to $83.39 a month and 15.5 to 16.7 cents a mile. But in April, it leaped to $167.75 a month and 37 cents a mile.

And when it renewed again in October it climbed to $266.93 a month and almost 60 cents a mile.

“The few insurance companies willing to write a policy were just as much if not more, so I kept my policy with Lemonade,” said Neil, who, despite driving less to reduce cost, said his monthly bill “more than doubled in the last seven months” from about $250 to $550, topping his monthly $453.52 lease payment for the vehicle.

Ananda Neil sits in the driver seat of his 2022 Hyundai Santa Fe along Webster Street on Tuesday, Dec. 17, 2024, in Oakland, Calif. Neil is paying nearly $600 a month for auto insurance as an Oakland resident. (Aric Crabb/Bay Area News Group)
Ananda Neil sits in the driver seat of his 2022 Hyundai Santa Fe along Webster Street on Dec. 17, 2024 in Oakland. (Aric Crabb/Bay Area News Group)

While there’s been much attention paid to rapidly rising insurance costs and policy non-renewals for California homeowners, the state also has had increasing rates for auto coverage. Auto insurance rates across the U.S. and in California began rising last year, and though they leveled off nationally this summer, they’ve continued to climb in California, according to the latest Insurify analysis.

In January 2021, the U.S. and California average annual auto insurance premium was about $1,500. But by November of this year, the national average for a full-coverage policy reached $2,315 while California’s jumped to $2,536, according to the latest Bankrate analysis of average rates provided by insurance data firm Quadrant Information Services.

California requires motorists to at least carry liability insurance for damage they might cause to others, and for that, the state’s average cost of $670 is slightly below the national average of $678.

But that, too, is about to change next year. Beginning in January, California will double minimum coverage requirements for bodily injury or death and triple it for property damage coverage under Senate Bill 1107.

Approved in 2022, the bill marks the first increase in California’s minimum liability limits in more than 56 years. Consumer Attorneys of California, the bill sponsor, said the outdated coverage requirement left California among “the bottom three states with the lowest levels of protection in the nation.” The Department of Insurance said about one in four policyholders would see significant increases.



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