Car insurance in Texas is legally required and more expensive than most people realize β the state average for full coverage runs about $247 per month, nearly 19% above the national average. But the spread between companies and cities is enormous. The right coverage at the right price is genuinely findable β if you know what you’re looking for and where to look.
Texas is an at-fault state β meaning whoever causes an accident is legally responsible for paying the resulting damages, both to the other vehicle and to the other person’s body. Your liability insurance pays those costs β but only up to your policy limits. If a serious accident costs more than your limits cover, you pay the difference personally: out of your savings, your paycheck, your home equity. Texas minimum limits of 30/60/25 were last updated in the early 2000s. The National Safety Council estimates that accidents with injuries average $45,000 in costs β already above the per-person bodily injury minimum. This is why insurance professionals universally recommend carrying more than the legal minimum.
The numbers in your Texas minimum coverage requirement are written as 30/60/25 β three limits that define what your insurer pays when you cause an accident. Here’s exactly what each one means and where it falls short.
| Coverage | Texas Minimum (30/60/25) | What It Means for You |
|---|---|---|
| Bodily injury β per person | $30,000 | Max your insurer pays for ONE person’s medical bills in an accident you caused. A single ER visit, surgery, and rehab can exceed this easily. |
| Bodily injury β per accident | $60,000 | Total cap for ALL injuries in one accident. Three people hurt? $60,000 split between them β you pay the rest personally. |
| Property damage β per accident | $25,000 | Max paid to repair or replace another person’s vehicle or property. A single mid-range truck can cost $45,000+ β you owe the difference. |
| Recommended minimum (experts) | 100/300/100 | What most insurance professionals recommend to protect personal assets. Cost difference from state minimum is often under $30/month. |
| Uninsured motorist (UM/UIM) | Optional β but required to be offered | Pays YOUR bills when the driver who hits YOU has no insurance. Roughly 1 in 8 Texas drivers is uninsured β this matters. |
| Personal injury protection (PIP) | $2,500 minimum β offered automatically | Pays YOUR medical bills regardless of fault. Must be offered; you must reject it in writing if you don’t want it. Worth keeping. |
| Collision | Optional (required if car is financed/leased) | Pays to repair YOUR car after a crash, regardless of who is at fault. Required by lenders β check your loan or lease agreement. |
| Comprehensive | Optional (often required if financed) | Covers YOUR car for hail, theft, flood, fire, animals. Texas hail and hurricane damage makes this particularly valuable. |
| SR-22 (high-risk filing) | Required after certain violations | A certificate your insurer files with the state proving you carry coverage. Required for 2 years after license suspension, DUI, or driving uninsured. |
The most-searched Texas car insurance questions β answered with actual numbers and Texas-specific context that generic national guides miss.
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How much is car insurance in the state of Texas? Full coverage: ~$150β$247/month depending on data source Β· Minimum coverage (liability only): ~$79β$87/month average Β· Texas is 19% more expensive than the national average for full coverage Β· Houston is the most expensive city in Texas; Austin is the cheapest major metroTexas car insurance costs more than most states β and the why matters for understanding your own bill. The state has some of the most dangerous highways in the country (several carry 85 mph speed limits, the highest in the U.S.), among the highest vehicle theft rates nationally (second in the country), and severe weather exposure that’s genuinely unusual: hurricanes, flooding, and β uniquely punishing for insurance β enormous hail events that can affect hundreds of thousands of cars simultaneously in a single storm. Houston and Dallas together see thousands of accidents per year, and both cities have urban density that produces minor fender-benders at a scale rural areas don’t see. All of that gets priced into Texas premiums. The city where you live within Texas matters as much as which company you choose: Houston drivers average around $3,200 per year for full coverage, while Austin drivers average closer to $2,676. The same driver, same car, same coverage β moving from Houston to Austin can save hundreds per year without changing anything else.
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Is car insurance required in the state of Texas? Yes β mandatory for every registered vehicle Β· Minimum 30/60/25 liability coverage required at all times Β· Must carry proof (paper or smartphone app β both are legal in Texas) Β· Texas uses TexasSure, an electronic database that flags your registration within 48 hours if your policy lapsesTexas law β specifically the Texas Transportation Code Β§601.051 β requires every driver to maintain liability insurance coverage of at least 30/60/25. You must carry proof of coverage at all times while driving, and you’re required to show it to a law enforcement officer upon request. Texas is one of the states that accepts digital proof on your smartphone β you don’t need a paper card. The state also runs TexasSure, an electronic insurance verification system that links your vehicle registration directly to your insurance policy status. When you buy insurance, your insurer reports it to TexasSure. When your policy lapses, cancels, or isn’t renewed, TexasSure flags it β often within 48 hours β and the Texas Department of Public Safety is notified. This means driving without insurance in Texas isn’t a situation you can slip through undetected for long. Penalties for first-offense uninsured driving run $175β$350 in fines. A second offense can cost up to $1,000, trigger license and registration suspension, result in vehicle impoundment, and require an SR-22 filing for two years after reinstatement.
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What is the cheapest car insurance in Texas? Cheapest for most Texas drivers: State Farm at $43β$56/month for minimum coverage Β· Texas Farm Bureau: second cheapest overall at $51/month for liability, but requires membership Β· USAA: cheapest of all but military families only Β· For full coverage: State Farm at $140/month leads; Texas Farm Bureau at $137/month is competitiveThe cheapest insurer in Texas varies by driver profile β but State Farm leads more categories in Texas than any competitor. For minimum liability, State Farm averages $43β$56 per month depending on the data source, with Texas Farm Bureau competitive at $51 per month (though Farm Bureau requires a separate membership fee). For full coverage, State Farm averages around $140 per month, Farm Bureau around $137. USAA is cheapest of all β often $20β$40 per month less than State Farm β but is available only to active military, veterans, and their immediate families. For drivers who don’t qualify for USAA, State Farm is the consistent price leader across most Texas cities. Geico averages around $86 per month for liability and is more expensive than State Farm for most standard profiles in Texas β though Geico narrows the gap in some low-risk suburban ZIP codes. If you’re in Houston specifically: State Farm averages $58 per month for liability; that’s the best rate in the city. In Waco and other smaller markets, rates are the lowest in the state regardless of company. The most important action: get quotes from at least three companies because the spread between the most and least expensive insurer for the same driver and car can be as large as $416 per month.
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What is the new law in Texas for auto insurance β what changed? Senate Bill 1238 (effective Sept. 2025): bans insurers from raising rates on surviving spouses by reclassifying them from “married” to “single” Β· HB 4178: proposed raising minimums from 30/60/25 to 50/100/40 β verify current status with your insurer Β· TexasSure electronic verification: enforcement remains active Β· No-fault coverage (PIP): Texas must still offer $2,500 minimum; you must reject in writingTwo significant Texas insurance law changes merit attention. Senate Bill 1238, which took effect September 1, 2025, addresses a practice that had quietly affected widows and widowers across the state for years: insurers were reclassifying a surviving spouse from “married” to “single” upon the death of a partner, which automatically raised their car insurance rate β because single drivers statistically have more claims than married drivers. SB 1238 makes this reclassification illegal, which affects tens of thousands of seniors whose insurance bills had risen through no fault of their own simply because they lost a spouse. The second change β Texas HB 4178, which proposed raising the state’s minimum liability limits from 30/60/25 to 50/100/40 β passed the legislature but its actual implementation and effective date varies by source. Check with your insurer or the Texas Department of Insurance directly to confirm what your current policy requires. The core practical takeaway regardless of where the minimum law lands: the state minimum β whether old or new β is still considered inadequate coverage by most insurance professionals for any driver with meaningful personal assets. Carrying 100/300/100 costs only a modest amount more and provides dramatically better financial protection.
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What happens if you drive without insurance in Texas? First offense: $175β$350 fine Β· Second offense: up to $1,000 fine, license and registration suspension, possible vehicle impoundment Β· SR-22 filing required for 2 years after suspension Β· TexasSure system flags your registration when policy lapses within 48 hoursDriving without insurance in Texas isn’t just a traffic ticket consequence β it has a tail that can affect you financially for two years. After a second offense or a license suspension, Texas requires you to file an SR-22 β a certificate your insurer submits to the state proving you carry at minimum the required coverage. SR-22 status doesn’t go away quickly: it stays on your record for two years. And during that period, virtually every insurance company considers you higher risk, which raises your premiums regardless of your driving record otherwise. Beyond the legal consequences, the financial exposure of driving without insurance in an at-fault accident is severe. If you cause a crash that injures someone and you’re uninsured, you’re personally liable for all medical bills, lost wages, and property damage from the first dollar β with no insurer to absorb any of it. A serious accident with injuries can easily generate $100,000 or more in legitimate claims. Saving the $79 per month it costs for minimum liability coverage becomes a very bad trade when that calculation lands on you personally.
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What is Progressive car insurance in Texas β is it a good option? Progressive is available statewide in Texas Β· Average rate: ~$79/month for liability, ~$150/month for full coverage (varies) Β· Cheaper than Geico in some Texas driver profiles Β· Snapshot program tracks driving but can raise rates if behavior is poor Β· Good option for drivers with bad credit; not the cheapest for clean-record drivers in most Texas citiesProgressive is a solid option for Texas drivers, though it’s rarely the cheapest for clean-record, good-credit profiles β where State Farm, USAA, and sometimes Texas Farm Bureau all offer lower rates. Where Progressive earns its place in Texas comparisons: drivers with bad credit (Progressive prices this more generously than State Farm), and drivers who want the Snapshot usage-based program’s flexibility in coverage design. Progressive’s Name Your Price tool lets Texas drivers set a premium target and see what coverage that buys β useful for budget-focused shoppers who know exactly what they can spend per month. Its gap insurance is also valuable for drivers financing newer vehicles, covering the difference between what you owe on a loan and what the car is worth if it’s totaled. In Texas specifically, Progressive’s rates for Houston and Dallas drivers are often in the middle of the pack β not the cheapest but competitive. For rural Texas where roads are less congested and accident rates are lower, Progressive often quotes more aggressively. Get the quote and compare against State Farm directly before deciding.
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How do I get the cheapest auto insurance in Texas β what actually works? Compare at least 3β5 companies: Texas drivers who shop save $612β$900/year on average Β· Enroll in telematics if low-mileage (State Farm Drive Safe & Save best for Texas β no rate-increase risk) Β· Bundle home and auto: larger absolute savings in Texas than most states because home rates are already high Β· Raise deductible: $500 to $1,000 saves 10β25% annually Β· Clean record: one ticket can add $40β$80/month in TexasThe single most effective action β and the one most Texas drivers skip β is comparing quotes from multiple companies. Texas data consistently shows drivers who shop three or more carriers save $612β$900 per year on average. That’s not a small difference. Second: State Farm’s Drive Safe & Save telematics program works particularly well for Texas drivers who are retired or work from home and drive fewer miles. Unlike Progressive’s Snapshot (which can raise your rate if you brake hard in Dallas traffic), Drive Safe & Save cannot increase your base rate β it only adds discounts. The mileage reduction it rewards is especially valuable in Texas because insurers price heavily for high annual mileage in congested markets. Third: bundling is a larger dollar savings in Texas than in most states precisely because home insurance is already expensive here β hail and storm exposure has driven Texas home premiums well above the national average. The combined bundle discount from State Farm often exceeds $1,429 per year on the combined policies. Fourth: for drivers with clean records, going three years without a ticket or claim unlocks accident-free and loyalty discounts that meaningfully reduce the base rate at renewal.
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Is minimum coverage enough in Texas β or do I need more? Minimum is legally sufficient but financially risky for almost any driver Β· The cost difference between 30/60/25 minimum and 100/300/100 recommended is often under $30/month Β· If you own a home or have savings over $30,000: minimum limits expose your assets to lawsuits Β· Key add-ons worth having in Texas: uninsured motorist (UM/UIM) and PIP, even if optionalMinimum coverage gets you legal on the road, but it’s not designed to fully protect you β it’s designed to provide a floor for accident victims. The gap between where minimum ends and where serious accidents begin has widened dramatically: the average new pickup truck costs $45,000β$55,000, exceeding Texas’s $25,000 property damage limit in a single collision. A T-bone accident with multiple injured people can produce medical bills that exhaust the $60,000 per-accident limit before the ambulance leaves the scene. The cost to jump from 30/60/25 to 100/300/100 β a recommendation made by essentially every insurance professional and personal finance expert β is often $20β$35 per month in Texas depending on your profile. Over a year that’s $240β$420. A single lawsuit judgment exceeding your limits can follow you for a decade and reach your home equity, wages, and retirement savings. Two specific coverage types worth keeping regardless of your policy limits in Texas: uninsured motorist (UM/UIM) coverage and personal injury protection (PIP). About one in eight Texas drivers is uninsured. UM coverage pays your medical bills and lost wages when the driver who hits you has no insurance or not enough β and in Texas, where enforcement of the insurance requirement is imperfect, that scenario is common enough to treat as a real risk, not an edge case.
Use the buttons below to find insurance agents, compare Texas auto rates, or get help from the Texas Department of Insurance if you have a complaint or question about your coverage.
- Step 1: Confirm your current policy meets Texas’s 30/60/25 minimum. If your coverage was purchased elsewhere or is older, call your insurer and verify the bodily injury and property damage limits specifically.
- Step 2: Keep proof of insurance on your phone. Texas accepts digital proof β the Allstate, State Farm, Geico, and Progressive apps all include digital insurance ID cards that satisfy the Texas requirement.
- Step 3: Don’t reject uninsured motorist (UM/UIM) coverage without thinking about it. One in eight Texas drivers is uninsured. This coverage pays your bills when one of them hits you. It must be offered β refuse it in writing only if you’ve made an informed decision.
- Step 4: Get at least three quotes at every renewal. The spread between the cheapest and most expensive insurer for the same Texas driver can be $416 per month. Loyalty doesn’t lower your premium β shopping does.
- Step 5: If you’re a widow or widower whose insurer raised your rate after your spouse’s death, Texas SB 1238 makes that practice illegal. File a complaint at tdi.texas.gov or call 1-800-252-3439.
- Step 6: Seriously consider 100/300/100 liability limits if you own a home, have savings, or earn a steady income. The legal minimum is $30,000 per person β well below the average cost of a serious injury accident. The upgrade typically costs less than $30/month and protects your assets from lawsuits.
This guide is for general informational purposes only. Texas insurance requirements, minimum limits, and applicable laws are subject to legislative changes β always verify current requirements with your insurer and the Texas Department of Insurance at tdi.texas.gov. Rate averages are mid-2026 estimates from publicly available data and vary significantly by driver profile, ZIP code, and individual underwriting. This page has no affiliation with any insurance company or state regulatory body.