Insurance rates up for autos in Arizona
As if spiraling gas prices weren’t enough, motorists across
After giving customers premium credits and refunds in 2020 as people stayed home and insurance claims plummeted due to the COVID-19 pandemic, auto insurers are raising rates to help cover higher claims costs driven by increased driving, higher repair costs and other factors.
Several large insurers including Geico, Allstate, Progressive and Farmers implemented auto-premium rate increases since mid-2021, rate filings with the
State Farm Mutual, the state’s second-largest auto liability insurer filed an 0.4% rate increase for its
Allstate Fire & Casualty, the state’s sixth-largest personal auto liability insurer, filed a 7% increase effective this month.
Claims costs rise
Insurers say they need higher premiums to offset higher claims losses since the height of the pandemic, citing factors including increased driving and higher repair costs driven by supply-chain issues and labor shortages.
Insurance companies moved to provide premium discounts and other relief to policyholders starting in
“No question that at the beginning of the pandemic, miles driven and claims fell off a cliff and during that unique period of time insurers did a lot of things to try to provide some relief to their policyholders,” said
“It's taken a while, but we're now back to the point where people are driving as much or more than they were pre-pandemic,” said Passmore citing data from the
At the same time, Passmore noted, the severity of accidents including fatalities have risen and repair costs have increased.
“Our approach is to make incremental adjustments based on driving behaviors to help minimize the impact to customers,” Sarkissian said. “Auto claim costs are increasing in part due to a rise in the cost of labor, materials and supply chain-related issues. Although miles driven, claim volume and severity have increased,
A report issued by the
As a result,
COVID-19 breaks debated
While
“The department can’t find a rate excessive as long as there is ample competition,” Klug said. “The department scrutinizes every rate filing it receives to make sure it is justified and meets the requirements of the law.”
While
Some offered temporary premium discounts or credits, while others changed their base rates, and most set up special programs to delay policy cancellations for non-payment for customers hit hard by COVID-19, she noted.
Industrywide, insurers refunded or discounted about
But some consumer advocates say the industry should have given policyholders a much bigger break and ended up pocketing much of that savings from the steep decline in auto losses in 2020.
Insurers should have returned about
“Since the pandemic, driving has mostly rebounded, but we strongly believe that
The APCI’s Passmore disputed the consumer advocates’ report and said premium relief is no longer warranted amid rapidly rising claims costs.
“They're still talking about a period of time that existed basically two years ago,” he said. “We're in a very different time now.”
Passmore said regulators and insurers must ensure that rates are not unfairly discriminatory and that there's sufficient rates to ensure the solvency of the carriers.
“It doesn't do any good to demand a bunch more refunds when you're just going to have to face that (rising costs) — it's kind of like kicking the can down the road.”
Saving on insurance
In the face of rising auto insurance costs, consumers can save money by shopping around for lower premiums, Klug and DeLong said.
Six-month premiums for the same insured individual can vary by hundreds of dollars, an auto premium survey issued periodically by the
The most recent 2021 survey is available online at tucne.ws/1jxf.
“We encourage everyone to shop around and spend an hour or two looking at various auto insurers and comparing the various rates in their situation,” DeLong said.
Drivers willing to give up a little privacy can also save by signing up for various programs in which electronic “telematics” devices are plugged into a vehicle and send data on driving behavior like speed and hard stops, allowing insurers to reward better drivers with policy discounts.
“Even though auto rates are rising,
She cited Allstate’s Drivewise program, which helps customers save based on their safe driving habits and Milewise, which she said allows low-mileage drivers to save 50% compared to traditional insurance policies.
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