Free car insurance comparison calculator. Compare coverage levels, deductible trade-offs, and total annual costs to find the best auto insurance value for your situation.
Auto insurance premiums vary dramatically based on coverage levels, deductibles, and your risk profile. The biggest savings opportunity is understanding the deductible trade-off: raising your deductible from $500 to $1,000 can save 15-25% on premiums, but you need enough savings to cover the higher out-of-pocket in a claim.
This calculator compares different coverage configurations side by side, calculates the break-even point for deductible changes, and helps you find the optimal balance between premium costs and out-of-pocket risk.
Use it alongside actual quotes from multiple insurers to make an informed decision. Auto insurance premiums vary dramatically based on coverage levels, deductibles, driving record, vehicle type, credit score, and location. Two otherwise identical policies from different carriers can differ by hundreds of dollars per year. This calculator helps you compare quotes on an apples-to-apples basis, revealing the true cost differences after accounting for coverage gaps, hidden fees, deductible levels, and discount eligibility.
Most people either overpay for coverage they don't need or underinsure to save on premiums. This calculator helps you find the sweet spot between adequate coverage and affordable premiums by analyzing the true cost trade-offs. Running the numbers before switching carriers ensures you maintain adequate coverage while reducing your annual premium.
Annual Savings = Premium_low_deductible − Premium_high_deductible Additional Risk = Higher_deductible − Lower_deductible Break-Even (years) = Additional Risk / Annual Savings Expected Annual Cost = Premium + (Deductible × Claim Probability)
Result: Save $360/year | Break-even: 1.4 years | Expected cost favors higher deductible
Raising deductible from $500 to $1,000 saves approximately 20% on premiums: $1,800 → $1,440/year ($360 savings). The additional risk is $500. Break-even: $500/$360 = 1.4 years. If you go 1.4+ years without a claim, the higher deductible saves money. With claims averaging once every 7 years, expected annual claim cost drops from $71 ($500/7) to $143 ($1,000/7) — but the $360 premium savings far outweighs the $72 increase in expected claim cost.
Raising your deductible is essentially self-insuring the first portion of a claim. If you raise from $500 to $1,000 and save $300/year, you're paying $300/year less in premiums for $500 more risk per claim. You break even after $500/$300 = 1.67 years. Since the average driver files a claim every 5-7 years, the higher deductible wins mathematically.
Auto insurance has distinct layers: liability (pays others; legally required), collision (your car in a crash), comprehensive (theft, weather, animals), and uninsured motorist (protects you from uninsured drivers). Liability is non-negotiable and should be high. Collision/comprehensive are optional and depend on your car's value. Uninsured motorist is highly recommended — 12% of drivers are uninsured.
For older, lower-value vehicles, calculate the "premium-to-value ratio." If annual comprehensive + collision premiums exceed 10% of your car's current value, drop them and save the premiums in a dedicated car fund.
If you have savings to cover the higher deductible and file claims infrequently (every 3+ years), yes. Raising from $500 to $1,000 typically saves 15-25% on premiums. The math favors higher deductibles for most drivers. The exception: if you file claims frequently or can't absorb the out-of-pocket cost.
State minimums (often $25K/$50K) are far too low. A single serious accident can cost $200K+. Recommended minimums: $100K/$300K bodily injury, $100K property damage, plus uninsured motorist coverage. If your assets are significant, add an umbrella policy.
When the annual premium exceeds 10% of your car's value. For a car worth $4,000 with $500/year comp+collision premium, you'd pay 12.5% of the car's value annually. At that point, self-insure by keeping the premium savings in savings.
In most states, insurers use credit-based insurance scores. A poor credit score can increase premiums 50-100%. Improving your score from "poor" to "good" could save $500-$1,000+/year. A few states (CA, HI, MA) prohibit using credit in insurance pricing.
Annually at minimum. Insurance companies frequently adjust rates, and your profile changes (age, credit, claims history). Shopping around 2-3 weeks before renewal gives you time to compare 5-7 quotes. Many people save $300-$600 by switching carriers.
Common overlooked discounts: multi-policy bundling (10-25%), paid-in-full (5-10%), paperless billing (3-5%), low mileage (<7,500 miles/year), good student, defensive driving course, professional organization memberships, and telematics/usage-based programs that track safe driving. Ask each carrier about every available discount because they rarely volunteer them, and stacking multiple discounts can reduce your premium by 30% or more.