Consumer Federation: Report Finds New York Drivers Pay Far More for Auto Insurance Solely Based on Their Credit Scores and Black and Latino Drivers Face Steepest Price Hikes
The report is prompting calls from CFA and New Yorkers for Responsible Lending for state lawmakers to protect drivers from discriminatory auto insurance pricing. The groups are supporting legislation introduced by Assembly Majority Leader
"On average, New Yorkers with poor credit are charged almost three times as much for auto insurance as residents with excellent credit, even if they have the exact same driving history, and the credit penalties are most severe in the state's majority Black and Latino ZIP codes," said
CFA acquired auto insurance premium data for every ZIP code in
In percentage terms, the penalty for having fair credit rather than excellent credit is a 57% premium hike. Drivers with poor credit pay 187% more on average.
"People have poor credit for a lot of reasons--including medical crises, job losses, poverty, and the legacy and persistence of systemic bias in financial services - and the price they pay for mandatory auto insurance should not be impacted by their credit history," said
In certain cities and boroughs, credit surcharges are even worse than the statewide average. For example, Buffalo drivers with poor credit pay on average
As the study reveals, average premiums are already much higher in
"Using socioeconomic and non-driving factors that are not inherently related to a person's ability to operate a car safely forces good drivers who are of lower socioeconomic status to pay more for our state's obligatory auto insurance," said Assembly Majority Leader
In addition to its own data analysis, CFA highlights the findings of a 2015 study by Consumer Reports, which shows that the credit penalty on low credit safe drivers serves to subsidize the premiums currently charged to more dangerous drivers who happen to have high credit scores. The Consumer Reports study found that
"It makes absolutely no sense that a good driver with a poor credit record can end up paying hundreds of dollars more for insurance than someone with a DUI conviction who happens to have excellent credit," said
While
"Auto insurance is already extremely costly in many low- and moderate-income neighborhoods and communities of color, and the use of credit scoring is making it worse," said
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