Calculator
Formula used
This calculator produces an estimated annual premium using multiplicative pricing factors:
- Base rate per sample insurer
- Vehicle factors: type × age × value × miles × commute
- Driver factors: age × experience × marital status
- Incident factor: accidents, tickets, claims, and major violations
- Location factor: territory risk and a simple state adjustment
- Coverage factor: limits and optional coverages with deductible impact
- Discounts: combined percentage discount (capped)
- Fees: estimated state fee percentage
Because real underwriting uses many more variables, treat this as a planning tool for shopping and scenario testing.
How to use this calculator
- Enter driver details, including incidents from recent years.
- Add vehicle information and typical yearly mileage.
- Select liability limits, then toggle collision and comprehensive.
- Choose deductibles; higher deductibles usually reduce cost.
- Select discounts you realistically qualify for.
- Press Compare rates to see the estimates above the form.
- Export the latest comparison as CSV or PDF for sharing.
Example data table
Sample comparison data for illustration only.
| Insurer | Liability | Collision / Comp | Discounts | Estimated annual |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apex Auto | 50/100/50 | Yes ($500) / Yes ($500) | Safe driver, Auto-pay | $1,120 |
| Harbor Mutual | 100/300/100 | Yes ($1,000) / Yes ($1,000) | Multi-policy, Paperless | $1,340 |
| Summit General | 50/100/50 | No / No | Pay in full | $790 |
| Apex Auto | 250/500/250 | Yes ($250) / Yes ($250) | Telematics, Safe driver | $1,980 |
| Summit General | 100/300/100 | Yes ($500) / Yes ($1,000) | Multi-policy, Auto-pay | $1,410 |
To match your real quotes, enter your closest scenario, then compare the range and savings.
Rate shopping reduces hidden overpayment
Insurers price the same driver differently because each uses its own loss models and underwriting appetite. In the calculator, sample insurers start from different base rates, then apply identical inputs. Even with the same coverage, the lowest and highest estimates can diverge by hundreds annually. Review annual and monthly figures to plan cash flow. Small changes can reorder the cheapest insurer.
Coverage choices drive the biggest swings
Liability limits and physical damage options are major levers. Moving from 50/100/50 to 100/300/100 raises the limit factor, while collision and comprehensive add multipliers. Deductibles matter: selecting $1,000 instead of $500 lowers premium but increases out‑of‑pocket cost. Vehicle value, annual miles, and commute distance also raise exposure. Comprehensive can cost less than collision, yet affects totals.
Driver history converts into measurable risk load
Risk events create compounding surcharges. The incident factor rises with each accident, ticket, or claim, and major violations add a larger jump. Age and experience matter: under‑25 drivers pay more, while the experience factor tapers as years licensed rise. Location adds territory and state adjustments for cost differences. A clean record usually delivers durable savings.
Discounts improve price, but stacking has limits
Discounts can offset risk, but stacking is limited. This tool caps combined discounts at 28% and adds a small telematics effect by insurer. Test realistic eligibility: multi‑policy, safe‑driver, usage‑based, pay‑in‑full, and billing preferences can shift cost. Verify program rules with your carrier. If telematics is selected, treat the estimate as provisional until a driving score posts.
Track scenarios with exports to decide confidently
Use scenario testing like a finance worksheet. Run one baseline, then adjust deductibles, add‑ons, or liability limits to see the range. Export CSV to keep dated assumptions, and use the PDF snapshot for sharing. Enter your current annual premium to estimate savings against the lowest option. Save multiple exports to compare renewals, vehicles, or added drivers.
FAQs
Is this a real quote from an insurer?
No. It is an educational estimate built from the inputs you enter and a sample pricing model. Use it to compare scenarios, then request official quotes from insurers or brokers for binding premiums.
Why do deductibles change the estimate so much?
A deductible shifts part of the expected claim cost back to you. Higher deductibles reduce the coverage factor and typically lower premium, but they increase your out‑of‑pocket cost if you file a claim.
Which inputs usually move premiums the most?
Driver age, incident history, territory risk, liability limits, and whether collision/comprehensive are selected. Vehicle value and annual mileage also matter because they influence expected claim frequency and severity.
How should I use the state field?
Select a state only if you want the calculator to apply a simple fee and risk adjustment. Real insurers use detailed rating territories, so treat this as a coarse modifier for scenario comparisons.
Why are discounts capped in the calculator?
In practice, discounts have eligibility rules and stacking limits, and some apply only to parts of the premium. The cap prevents unrealistic combinations and keeps results closer to what many carriers allow.
Can I compare monthly payments instead of annual premiums?
Yes. The results table shows an estimated monthly amount by dividing the annual premium by twelve. Some insurers charge installment fees, so your actual monthly bill can differ from this simple estimate.