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Car Insurance in New York State

Budget Seniors, June 22, 2026June 22, 2026
πŸš—πŸ—½
New York State Β· No-Fault Laws Β· Minimum Coverage Β· Cheapest Companies

New York has some of the strictest car insurance requirements in the country β€” and some of the most confusing. This guide covers exactly what coverage the law requires, what you’ll actually pay based on where you live, who offers the lowest rates, and what to do if you’re overpaying right now.

πŸ“°
What’s Happening Right Now in NY Auto Insurance

Several major carriers raised rates in 2026 β€” the New York Department of Financial Services has approved multiple statewide premium increases, driven largely by rising healthcare costs feeding into mandatory no-fault (PIP) claims and more frequent severe weather events causing comprehensive claims across downstate New York. Separately, Assembly Bill A5053 β€” introduced again in January 2026 β€” proposes doubling New York’s minimum liability limits for the first time since 1995, from the current 25/50/10 to 50/100/25. The bill has not passed as of this writing, but if it does, minimum coverage policies will cost more. Worth watching if you’re shopping for a new policy.

πŸ“Œ The Short Version for New Yorkers in a Hurry

New York is a no-fault insurance state β€” which means your own insurance covers your own medical bills after an accident, regardless of who caused it. That’s why NY requires more types of coverage than most states, and why rates here are higher than the national average. The legal minimum is 25/50/10 liability + $50,000 PIP + uninsured motorist coverage. Skip any of those and the DMV finds out electronically β€” your registration gets suspended, often before you realize there’s a problem. The rest of this guide explains what all of that means in plain language, what it costs, and who charges the least for it.

πŸ“‹ Key Facts β€” Answered Directly

Eight questions New York drivers ask most β€” answered without insurance-industry jargon.

  • 1
    How much does car insurance cost in New York State? Full coverage: roughly $226–$341/month statewide average Β· Minimum coverage: roughly $106–$148/month Β· NYC drivers pay significantly more β€” upward of $435/month for full coverage
    Cost estimates vary widely depending on which data source you look at, largely because different analysts use different driver profiles. What’s consistent across all of them: New York State is among the most expensive states in the U.S. for car insurance β€” and New York City is nearly double the state average on its own. The cheapest areas in the state are the rural Southern Tier and Western New York, where a clean-record driver can find full coverage for around $158/month in some towns. Brooklyn consistently ranks as the most expensive borough, averaging around $549/month for full coverage.
  • 2
    What car insurance is required by law in New York State? Three required coverages: (1) Liability β€” 25/50/10 minimums Β· (2) Personal Injury Protection (PIP/no-fault) β€” $50,000 minimum Β· (3) Uninsured motorist coverage β€” 25/50 minimum
    New York’s minimum liability limits are written as 25/50/10: $25,000 per injured person, $50,000 total per accident, and $10,000 for property damage. The PIP requirement is notable β€” $50,000 minimum is far higher than the $3,000–$10,000 PIP minimums in many other no-fault states. This is because New York’s no-fault system is designed to cover real medical costs and 80% of lost wages up to $2,000/month. Insurance must remain active as long as the vehicle is registered β€” even if it’s parked and never driven. Companies notify the DMV electronically whenever coverage starts or stops.
  • 3
    Who has the cheapest car insurance in New York? Progressive and NYCM (New York Central Mutual) consistently offer the lowest rates Β· Progressive: ~$78/month full coverage for a clean-record driver Β· NYCM: ~$44/month minimum coverage statewide
    Progressive leads most independent analyses for full coverage in New York at around $938/year ($78/month) for a 35-year-old driver with a clean record. NYCM β€” a regional insurer that doesn’t get much national attention β€” offers the lowest minimum coverage rates in the state at roughly $44/month and also has the cheapest options for teen drivers, who pay less than half the average elsewhere. Erie Insurance is also competitive, particularly in upstate New York and for drivers with a clean record. The gap between the cheapest and most expensive companies in New York for the same driver can easily exceed $100/month β€” which is why getting at least three quotes before buying or renewing is genuinely worth the time.
  • 4
    Why is New York car insurance so expensive? Four main drivers: no-fault PIP laws inflate baseline costs Β· NYC traffic density raises accident frequency Β· Above-average vehicle theft rates Β· Severe weather and hurricane risk in downstate NY
    New York’s no-fault law is the single biggest structural reason insurance costs more here. Because your own insurer must pay your medical bills after any accident regardless of fault, every policy includes this cost from day one β€” there’s no waiting to determine who was responsible. New York City compounds this with some of the worst traffic congestion in the country, a vehicle theft rate that ranks the state in the top 10 nationally (28,272 thefts reported in 2024), and a position in the North Atlantic Basin that makes it vulnerable to hurricanes and severe storm damage. Insurers who pay more claims in New York build those costs into every policy sold here. Bad credit can add over $2,000 to an annual premium in NY β€” one of the larger credit-based pricing penalties in the country.
  • 5
    What happens if I drive without insurance in New York? License suspension Β· Registration revocation Β· Court fines up to $1,500 Β· $750 to reinstate a revoked license Β· Personal financial liability for any accident costs you cause
    New York takes uninsured driving seriously in part because insurance companies report lapses to the DMV automatically. You don’t get a warning β€” if your policy cancels and you haven’t surrendered your plates, the DMV will suspend your registration, often within days. Driving on a suspended registration is a separate offense with its own penalties. Beyond the DMV consequences, driving uninsured means you’re personally responsible for every dollar of damage or injury you cause in an accident β€” and in a serious crash in New York, that can run well into six figures given the state’s average personal injury claim of $46,726 (third-highest in the U.S.). If your insurer has stopped offering you coverage due to your driving record, the New York Automobile Insurance Plan (NYAIP) at nypass.com is a state-run program that assigns high-risk drivers to insurers required to cover them.
  • 6
    Does my credit score affect my car insurance rate in New York? Yes β€” significantly. Drivers with poor credit in NY pay an average of $2,000+ more per year for the same coverage compared to drivers with good credit
    New York is one of the states where insurers are legally permitted to use a “credit-based insurance score” β€” a version of your credit history β€” when calculating your premium. Drivers with excellent credit typically save over $1,500/year compared to those with poor credit on otherwise identical policies. The insurer doesn’t use your credit score directly; it uses a proprietary scoring model built on credit report data. If your credit has improved since you last got a quote, it’s worth shopping for new quotes β€” your rate may have dropped substantially. Insurers must use your actual credit history, not just your general credit range, so a significant improvement in your score is worth checking periodically.
  • 7
    What is no-fault insurance and how does it work in New York? In a no-fault state, your own insurer pays your medical bills and 80% of lost wages after any accident β€” regardless of who caused it Β· This applies before any lawsuit can proceed Β· To sue for pain and suffering, you must meet NY’s “serious injury” threshold
    New York’s no-fault system was designed to reduce lawsuits and speed up medical payments after crashes. When you’re hurt in an accident, you file with your own PIP coverage first β€” it covers reasonable medical costs, 80% of lost wages up to $2,000/month for up to three years, and other expenses like childcare. The trade-off is that you generally cannot sue the other driver for pain and suffering unless your injury qualifies as “serious” β€” defined in law as significant disfigurement, a broken bone, permanent limitation of a body organ or system, or substantial loss of daily activities for 90 out of 180 days. Minor injuries go through PIP only, which keeps many small fender-bender claims out of court entirely. Pedestrians and cyclists hit by a New York-registered vehicle are also covered under that vehicle’s PIP, which is unusual and worth knowing.
  • 8
    Is minimum coverage enough in New York β€” or should I buy more? Minimum coverage is almost always insufficient for serious accidents Β· NY’s 25/50/10 limits haven’t changed since 1995 Β· The average personal injury claim in NY is $46,726 β€” nearly the entire $50,000 per-accident liability limit Β· Most experts recommend at least 100/300/100
    Here’s the math problem with minimum coverage in New York: the $25,000 per-person bodily injury limit can be consumed by a single ER visit and overnight hospital stay in New York City, where healthcare costs rank among the nation’s highest. If someone is seriously injured in an accident you caused and their damages exceed your policy limit, you owe the difference personally β€” out of your own savings, home equity, or future wages. The 25/50/10 limits were set in 1995 and have not been adjusted for inflation or medical cost increases in 30 years. Most insurance professionals recommend a minimum of 50/100/50, with 100/300/100 if you own assets worth protecting. Adding $100,000 in property damage coverage from the $10,000 minimum typically costs only $20–$40 more per month β€” a meaningful upgrade for a small price.
πŸ›‘οΈ New York Car Insurance Coverage β€” Required vs. Optional

Here’s every coverage type available in New York, whether it’s required by law, and what it actually does for you β€” explained in plain terms.

Coverage Type Required? What It Covers NY Minimum
Bodily Injury Liability Required Medical costs, lost wages, and legal costs for people you injure in a crash you cause $25,000/person Β· $50,000/accident
Property Damage Liability Required Repairs to the other driver’s vehicle or property (fences, buildings, etc.) when you’re at fault $10,000/accident
Personal Injury Protection (PIP / No-Fault) Required Your own medical bills, 80% of lost wages (up to $2,000/mo), and essential expenses β€” regardless of fault $50,000/person
Uninsured Motorist (UM) Required Protects you if you’re injured by a driver with no insurance or a hit-and-run driver $25,000/person Β· $50,000/accident
Collision Coverage Optional Repairs to your own vehicle after any collision, regardless of fault. Required if your car is financed or leased. Your choice of deductible ($500–$2,000)
Comprehensive Coverage Optional Theft, vandalism, flood, hail, fire, animal damage β€” anything other than a collision. Highly recommended given NY’s vehicle theft rates. Your choice of deductible
Supplementary UM/UIM (SUM) Optional Extra protection when the at-fault driver’s limits aren’t enough to cover your injuries. Insurers must offer it; you can accept or decline. Up to your liability limits
Additional PIP Optional Extends your PIP above the $50,000 minimum for serious long-term injuries and ongoing lost wages Typically up to $100,000–$1M+
Rental Reimbursement Optional Pays for a rental car while yours is being repaired after a covered claim Usually $30–$50/day up to a set limit
Roadside Assistance Optional Towing, jump-starts, flat tires, and lockout help β€” often available through AAA for less than an add-on policy Varies by insurer
⚠️ The $10,000 Property Damage Problem

New York’s $10,000 property damage minimum is less than half the average cost of a new car and has not been updated since 1995. If you total someone’s car worth $35,000 and your policy only covers $10,000, you owe the other $25,000 personally. Upgrading property damage coverage to $50,000 or $100,000 typically adds only $10–$25/month β€” one of the highest-value upgrades you can make for a small price.

πŸ” Your Specific Situation β€” What to Do
I think I’m paying too much β€” how do I lower my New York car insurance bill?
OVERPAYING Β· SAVE MONEY
The single most effective step is also the one most people skip: actually shopping around and getting competing quotes. In New York, the same driver profile can be quoted rates that vary by over $100/month between carriers β€” that’s $1,200/year for identical coverage. Start with Progressive and NYCM, which consistently come in lowest for full coverage and minimum coverage respectively in independent analyses. Beyond shopping around, raising your deductible from $500 to $1,000 typically reduces your collision and comprehensive premium by 15–20% β€” a worthwhile trade if you have enough in savings to cover the higher deductible. Bundling your auto and renters or homeowners insurance with the same company usually earns a 5–15% multi-policy discount. If your credit has improved in the past year or two, that alone can drop your premium significantly β€” insurers in New York price heavily on credit-based insurance scores. If you drive fewer miles than average (under 7,500/year), ask about low-mileage discounts or usage-based insurance programs where a monitoring device tracks your actual driving behavior rather than using averages.
πŸ’‘ Get 3+ quotes β€” the cheapest can save $1,200+/year πŸ“ˆ Raise deductible to $1,000 β€” saves 15–20% on collision/comprehensive 🏠 Bundle home + auto β€” typically 5–15% off each πŸ“‰ Better credit = lower rate β€” worth re-quoting if yours improved
I’m a new driver or teen in New York β€” what should I expect to pay?
NEW DRIVERS Β· TEENS
Teen and new drivers pay sharply higher premiums in New York β€” the state average for an 18-year-old is around $297/month for minimum coverage alone, which is three times what a 30-year-old pays for the same policy. Full coverage for a teen in New York averages over $600/month with most carriers. The most effective cost-reduction strategy for new drivers is being added to a parent’s or older relative’s existing policy rather than getting a separate policy β€” shared policies spread the risk and produce dramatically lower per-person rates. NYCM offers the most competitive teen rates in New York at around $80/month for minimum liability and $276/month for full coverage β€” roughly one-quarter and one-half the state average, respectively. Good student discounts (typically requiring a B average or better) can trim 5–15% further. Driver education certification courses also produce discounts with most carriers. The teen premium typically starts dropping meaningfully at age 21 and continues decreasing through the mid-30s as the clean driving record builds.
πŸ‘¨β€πŸ‘©β€πŸ‘§ Add to parent’s policy β€” biggest savings for new drivers πŸ† NYCM β€” cheapest teen rates in NY by a large margin πŸŽ“ Good student discount β€” ask every company you quote πŸ“š Driver’s ed certification reduces rates with most carriers
I had an accident or ticket β€” what happens to my insurance now?
ACCIDENTS Β· VIOLATIONS Β· HIGH RISK
A recent at-fault accident in New York raises full-coverage rates by about 26% on average β€” roughly $59 more per month β€” but the impact varies significantly between insurers, so shopping is critical after any incident. A single speeding ticket typically adds about 8% to a NY premium. A DUI is far more damaging: it pushes the average annual premium to around $4,478 β€” a $1,382 increase over a clean-record driver. One important timing note: your current rates don’t change mid-policy. The increase takes effect at renewal. That means you have time between an incident and your renewal to shop around and find the insurer that penalizes your specific situation least. Progressive tends to have the most competitive post-violation rates in New York. If your record has made you uninsurable in the standard market, the New York Automobile Insurance Plan (NYAIP) at nypass.com is a state program that matches high-risk drivers with insurers required to cover them. It’s more expensive than standard market coverage but keeps you legally insured while your record improves.
⏳ Rate increase hits at renewal, not immediately β€” use that time to shop 🚦 Progressive often has most competitive post-ticket rates in NY πŸ”„ DUI: expect ~$1,400+/year increase β€” compare every company πŸ“‹ Uninsurable? NYAIP program: nypass.com
I live in NYC β€” how is car insurance different from the rest of the state?
NEW YORK CITY Β· BOROUGHS
New York City operates under the same state requirements but costs nearly double the statewide average β€” and the borough you live in makes a substantial difference even within the city. Brooklyn is the most expensive at an average of $549/month for full coverage. Manhattan and the Bronx are not far behind. Staten Island and Queens are slightly lower but still well above the state average. The density of claims in NYC β€” from both traffic accidents and vehicle theft β€” drives up every category of premium. For NYC drivers specifically, comprehensive coverage is worth particular consideration: New York ranks in the top 10 states nationally for vehicle theft, and comprehensive is the only coverage that pays if your car is stolen. Despite the high cost environment, Progressive maintains the most competitive quotes in NYC for full coverage, averaging around $218/month β€” roughly half the city-wide average of $435/month. Even in the most expensive city in the country for car insurance, shopping makes a meaningful difference.
πŸ—ΊοΈ Brooklyn: most expensive borough (~$549/mo full coverage) βœ… Progressive: cheapest in NYC ~$218/mo β€” roughly half city average πŸ”’ Comprehensive coverage: essential in NY given top-10 theft ranking πŸ“ Same state law, different pricing β€” ZIP code affects rate significantly
My insurer is canceling or non-renewing my policy β€” what are my options?
COVERAGE GAPS Β· CANCELLATION Β· NYAIP
A coverage lapse in New York is more consequential than in most states because the insurer notifies the DMV electronically the day it happens. If your policy is canceled or non-renewed, you have a narrow window to either get new coverage, surrender your plates (which suspends your registration legally), or face automatic registration suspension with civil penalties. If you’re being canceled due to your driving record and can’t find voluntary market coverage, the New York Automobile Insurance Plan (NYAIP) exists specifically for this situation. You must certify that you’ve tried and failed to find coverage below NYAIP rates in the last two months, then apply at nypass.com. NYAIP assigns you to an insurer from a pool of participating companies. Rates are higher than the voluntary market but not as high as being uninsured. One common situation: people who move out of NY but still have a car registered here. New York requires NY-issued insurance β€” out-of-state policies are never accepted for NY-registered vehicles, even if you’ve relocated. If you’re moving, update your registration and policy together to avoid a coverage lapse that triggers a suspension.
πŸ†˜ Can’t find coverage? Apply at NYAIP: nypass.com 🏳️ Surrendering plates = legal lapse with no DMV penalty πŸ“¬ Cancellation notice β†’ act within days, not weeks 🚫 Out-of-state insurance never valid for NY-registered vehicles
πŸ“Š Cheapest Companies in New York β€” At a Glance
πŸ₯‡ Cheapest Full Coverage
Progressive
~$78/month ($938/year) for a 35-year-old clean-record driver Β· Also cheapest after a DUI (~$91/mo) Β· Competitive in NYC at ~$218/mo Β· Strong app and claims experience
πŸ₯‡ Cheapest Minimum Coverage
NYCM Insurance
~$44/month for liability-only statewide Β· Best rates for teen drivers Β· Regional NY carrier with strong local claims support Β· Available mainly upstate and suburban areas
πŸ… Best for Clean-Record Drivers
Erie Insurance
Competitive full coverage for safe drivers Β· Particularly strong in upstate NY Β· Highly rated for claims satisfaction Β· No rate increase for first at-fault accident with some plans
πŸ“‹ Last Resort Option
NYAIP Program
State-run plan for drivers who can’t get voluntary coverage Β· Must certify 60-day failed search first Β· Higher rates than standard market Β· Apply at nypass.com Β· Keeps you legally insured
πŸ“ Find Insurance Help Near You

Use these buttons to find local insurance agents, DMV offices, or compare quotes for your ZIP code.

Searching near you…
πŸ”‘ Quick Reference β€” Official New York Links & Contacts
πŸ›οΈ NY DMV insurance requirements: dmv.ny.gov πŸ“‹ NY Department of Financial Services: dfs.ny.gov πŸ†˜ NYAIP high-risk plan: nypass.com πŸ“ž DFS consumer help line: 800-342-3736 ⚑ Progressive quote: progressive.com πŸ—ΊοΈ NYCM Insurance: nycm.com πŸ”’ Report insurance fraud: NY Insurance Frauds Bureau: dfs.ny.gov/consumers/insurance_fraud πŸš— DMV plate surrender (to pause coverage legally): dmv.ny.gov
βœ… 5-Step Checklist for New York Drivers
  • Step 1: Confirm your current policy includes all three required coverages: 25/50/10 liability, $50,000 PIP, and 25/50 uninsured motorist. Check your declarations page β€” it lists every coverage and limit on your policy.
  • Step 2: Seriously consider upgrading property damage to at least $50,000 and bodily injury to 100/300. NY’s minimum $10,000 property damage hasn’t kept pace with actual car values. The upgrade typically costs under $25/month.
  • Step 3: Get competing quotes from at least three carriers before your next renewal. Progressive, NYCM, and Erie are the consistent price leaders in NY. The same coverage can cost $100+/month more at some companies β€” comparison shopping is the highest-ROI step available to most NY drivers.
  • Step 4: Never let your coverage lapse without surrendering your plates first. If your policy cancels β€” even for one day β€” the DMV finds out automatically. Surrendering plates at a local DMV office pauses the insurance requirement legally while your car isn’t in use.
  • Step 5: If you’ve had a speeding ticket, accident, or DUI, wait until the incident is more than three years old and then immediately re-shop your rate β€” most violations fall off your rating at 36 months in New York, which can produce a significant premium reduction at your next renewal.

This guide is intended for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or financial advice. Car insurance rates, requirements, and regulations in New York State are subject to change. Always verify current minimum coverage requirements through the New York DMV (dmv.ny.gov) and the New York State Department of Financial Services (dfs.ny.gov) before purchasing or modifying a policy. Rate figures cited reflect publicly reported averages from multiple industry sources and will not match your individual quote, which depends on your specific driving record, ZIP code, vehicle, age, credit history, and coverage selections. This page has no commercial affiliation with any insurance carrier or broker.

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