If only you could top off your car's cheap insurance the next
time you were in Arizona.
Bullhead City, Ariz., is the least expensive town in the U.S. to
buy car insurance. A 40-year-old male with a clean driving record
in a 2012 Honda Accord would pay $730 a year, a new
CarInsurance.com analysis of insurance rates in every U.S. ZIP code
finds. We averaged insurance rates for all ZIP codes for each town
(most towns contain more than one ZIP code) to find the most and
least expensive places to buy car insurance.
That same driver could:
- Move a couple of miles to Laughlin, Nev., just across the
Colorado River, and watch his rates zoom 70 percent to $1,280 a
year.
- Go to New Orleans, where moving across town could make rates
rise by $872, or 33 percent.
- Try Manhattan, where within the 24 square miles of the island
the same driver in the same car could pay as little as $1,772 or
as much as $2,847.
The most expensive town to buy car insurance in the U.S. is
Highland Park, Mich., where the Accord driver would pay an
astounding $4,214. That's without any accidents, DUIs, speeding
tickets or bad credit. Use our "
Nosy Neighbor
" tool to compare average rates anywhere in the country.
|
10 least expensive cities to insure a car
|
Avg. Rate
|
| 1. Bullhead City,
Ariz. |
$730
|
|
On the Colorado River, opposite the casino destination
of Laughlin, Nev.
|
|
| 2. Chloride, Ariz. |
$731
|
|
The oldest continuously inhabited mining town in
Arizona.
|
|
| 3. Oatman, Ariz. |
$731
|
|
Clark Gable and Carole Lombard honeymooned here, on old
U.S. Route 66.
|
|
| 4. Pine Point, Maine |
$733
|
|
Lighthouses, lobster pounds and beaches.
|
|
| 5. West Scarborough,
Maine |
$733
|
|
Woodsy area of Scarborough, split by the Nonesuch
River.
|
|
| 6. Lake Havasu City,
Ariz. |
$734
|
|
Reassembled London Bridge is Arizona's second-largest
tourist attraction.
|
|
| 7. Cumberland Foreside,
Maine |
$735
|
|
Portland suburb. "Foreside" means it's on the
beach.
|
|
| 8. Amity, Maine |
$736
|
|
Moose country. 2011 population: 186
|
|
| 9. Ashland, Maine |
$736
|
|
Crossroads of the Maine North Woods.
|
|
| 10. Blaine, Maine |
$736
|
|
Named for then-Speaker of the House James G.
Blaine.
|
|
|
|
|
|
10 most expensive cities to insure a car
|
Avg. Rate
|
| 10. Springfield Gardens,
N.Y. |
$3,213
|
|
Just north of J.F.K. International Airport.
|
|
| 9. St. Albans, N.Y. |
$3,233
|
|
Once home to Count Basie and Lena Horne.
|
|
| 8. Allison, Texas |
$3,385
|
|
Atop a gas field known as the world's largest producer
of helium.
|
|
| 7. Bronx, N.Y. |
$3,443
|
|
Home of the Yankees and the Bronx Zoo.
|
|
| 6. Grosse Pointe Park,
Mich. |
$3,504
|
|
Tony suburb just east of Detroit.
|
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| 5. Detroit |
$3,709
|
|
Known as its height as the Paris of the West.
|
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| 4. Brooklyn, N.Y. |
$3,819
|
|
The most populous of the five New York boroughs.
|
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| 3. Fort Hamilton,
N.Y. |
$3,947
|
|
In the shadow of the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge.
|
|
| 2. Hamtramck, Mich. |
$3,953
|
|
Along with No. 1 Highland Park, surrounded by
Detroit.
|
|
| 1. Highland Park,
Mich. |
$4,214
|
|
Home of the first Ford assembly line.
|
|
It's all about the insurance claims
If you live in a particular ZIP code -- whether in a mansion or
a hovel -- your rate starts with that ZIP's base insurance
rate.
Insurance companies group ZIP codes into different risk
categories based on the number and severity of claims. "Territorial
rating," as the practice is known, is used to produce a base rate
that is the starting point for anyone seeking insurance coverage in
most states.
A few states limit the use of territories as a primary rating
factor. California, for example, requires insurance companies to
calculate rates based on driving records and miles driven before
considering location. But there's no getting around the impact of a
high-risk address. Auto insurance rates in Los Angeles are 150
percent higher than those a hundred miles north in Santa
Barbara.
"The differences in risk are pretty sizable," says Pete Moraga,
spokesperson for the nonprofit
Insurance Information Network of California
. "Santa Barbara doesn't have the traffic or theft or vandalism
that Los Angeles does."
Critics of territorial pricing say the poor are penalized for
their addresses rather than for their driving history.
"I don't think any consumer would consider it fair that your
address matters more than your driving record," says Mark Savage,
staff attorney for Consumers Union, which successfully pushed
California regulators to emphasize driving experience, miles driven
and driving record instead.
Yet if all location-based rates were eliminated, Moraga says,
those currently paying the lowest premiums would suffer. "It's a
balancing act," he says. "Insurance is all about pricing risk
fairly so that those with higher risk are paying what they
should."
You've got to shop around
Discounts and surcharges are calculated from your base
territorial rate. If your base rate is high, the consequences of
any accident or violation you have are magnified.
For example, one insurance company charges $844 for basic
liability coverage to residents of 98101 in Seattle, but it charges
just $341 for residents in 98926 in rural Ellensburg, Wash.
Now add in a DUI surcharge, multiplying that base rate by 1.5.
(Most companies would penalize even more heavily.) In Seattle, that
driver with basic liability now pays $1,290. In Ellensburg, the
same driver pays $510.
In most states, every part of your policy is affected by the
territorial rate. That's why
comparing car insurance quotes
becomes all the more important, says Penny Gusner,
CarInsurance.com's consumer analyst.
"These companies all have differing claims experiences in your
ZIP code," Gusner says. "The quotes you get are likely to reflect
that. One insurer may put your area into a high-risk bucket, and
another may not."
For example, the average rate from six major insurance carriers
for ZIP code 48101 in Dearborn, Mich., was $2,522 -- but that
included rates as low as $1,776 and as high as $4,374. (See "
Pocket $1,102 just by shopping around
.")
Methodology
CarInsurance.com commissioned Quadrant Information Services to
provide a report of average auto insurance rates for a 2012 Honda
Accord for every ZIP code in the United States. We calculated rates
using data for six large carriers (Allstate, Farmers, GEICO,
Nationwide, Progressive and State Farm).
Averages are based on insurance for a single 40-year-old male
who commutes 12 miles to work each day, with policy limits of
100/300/50 ($100,000 for injury liability for one person, $300,000
for all injuries and $50,000 for property damage in an accident)
and a $500 deductible on collision and comprehensive coverage. This
hypothetical driver has a clean record and good credit. The rate
includes uninsured motorist coverage. Average rates are for
comparative purposes. Your own rate will depend on your personal
factors and vehicle.