The “cheapest” policy isn’t always the best deal. Use the proven levers below to reduce your premium while keeping coverage that actually protects you.
These are the areas where you can usually move the needle the most (without gambling your protection).
1) Compare providers (don’t loyalty-tax yourself)
Different insurers price the same risk differently. Switching can beat “calling to renegotiate.”
2) Raise deductibles (carefully)
Higher deductibles usually lower premiums — but only do it if you can cover the deductible tomorrow.
3) Adjust liability limits (avoid minimum-only traps)
State minimums can be cheap — and financially dangerous. Compare “value,” not just price.
4) Stack discounts
Most people miss at least 2–3 discounts they qualify for.
5) Remove add-ons you don’t need
Some add-ons are useful; others are “nice-to-have.” Evaluate them vs your budget.
6) Improve insurance score (where allowed)
In many states, credit-based insurance scores can affect pricing. Improving it can reduce premiums.
7) Match car choice to insurance costs
Repair costs, theft risk, and claim frequency vary by model. Insurance can differ more than you expect.
Tick what applies to you. Then start a quote flow and make sure these discounts show up.
The cheapest policy can backfire after a claim. Use these “cheap but safe” guidelines.
Often the lowest monthly cost — but you’re paying out-of-pocket if your car is damaged.
You can keep collision/comp and still reduce premium by optimizing deductibles and add-ons.
For tickets, accidents, DUI, SR-22: the cheapest option is usually the best “fit” insurer for your profile.
Start a quote flow, compare offers, and verify your discounts. One click — fast results.
Compare multiple providers, then optimize deductibles/limits and stack discounts (bundle, multi-car, safe driver).
It’s often the lowest premium, but it can be risky. Comparing slightly higher limits can deliver better value for a small price increase.
Yes. Local risk factors and claim costs vary. That’s why quotes can change a lot even within the same state.
At least at renewal. Also consider shopping after life changes (new car, move, improved credit, tickets fall off).