Rising US Auto Insurance Rates Are Disproportionately Hurting Classic Car Owners

Rising US Auto Insurance Rates Are Disproportionately Hurting Classic Car Owners

The Meteoric Rise in U.S. Auto Insurance Rates is Being Subsidized by Collector Car Owners According to Classic & Collector Insurer OpenRoad

  • Standard auto insurers continue their efforts to recover from the unprecedented losses they experienced during COVID-19 due to spikes in catastrophic insurance claims and increased vehicle repair costs.

  • As a result, US drivers have experienced the largest rate increase seen in nearly 50 years, including less risk-prone collector car owners.

  • While “Bundle and Save” programs have provided some relief for daily drivers, many collector car owners are paying more than they should according to a new player in the collector car insurance market.

DALLAS, Jan. 2, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — If you think your auto insurance rates have skyrocketed in recent years, you’d be right. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) saw the cost of auto insurance rise 51% over the past 3 years, six times faster than inflation overall.

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What made auto insurance see the biggest price jump in the CPI?  Blame the lingering effects of COVID and the increase in reckless behavior seen on US roads. There were more frequent, faster-than-normal speeding drivers and drunk driving surged, leading to a spike in crash severity, all of which led to more catastrophic vehicle and injury claims on auto insurers. Moreover, the pandemic created materials, parts, and labor shortages, causing repair costs for customer claims to climb like never before. Both factors combined have caused auto insurance rates to soar with little relief in sight.

Good Drivers and Auto Collectors Are Being Overcharged
In addition to the severe insurance rate increases impacting law-abiding daily drivers, collectors of classic, antique, and custom cars are among the most severely affected by these insurance cost increases. Meanwhile, agents and brokers who service this community are struggling to keep their clients’ rates under control.

These collectors face a double inequity: not only are they statistically less likely to get into an accident or file a claim, but standard auto insurers often don’t offer proportionally lower rates for owners who typically drive their vintage vehicles fewer than 5,000 miles annually – compared to the average 12,000+ miles driven in other vehicles.

In effect, auto collectors and good drivers have been quietly subsidizing the catastrophic losses felt by insurance companies.

For Classic Car Owners, It May Pay to “UNbundle and Save”
Drivers have been persuaded that bundling multiple insurance products like auto and home can reduce rates, but these bundling practices often cause coverage gaps for owners of collector vehicles.

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