New Jersey Drivers Face the Country’s Biggest Car Insurance Hike at 10.46 Percent
New Jersey drivers renewing their auto policies this year are absorbing the steepest rate increase in the nation. Insurify data projects a 10.46% average premium jump for New Jersey in 2026, more than 15 times the national average increase of 0.67%. State records reviewed by the New Jersey Monitor show regulators have approved over 300 rate hike requests from 2022 onward, with some drivers seeing their bills climb as much as 32.5% in two years.
The state’s average full-coverage premium now sits at $3,254 a year, according to April data from Bankrate. Compare that to Idaho, the cheapest state in the country at $1,476 a year, or Louisiana, the most expensive at $4,135. New Jersey lands in the top 10 nationally, and the direction of travel points higher still.
A Law Passed to Protect Drivers Is Pushing Premiums Up
Insurance regulators and consumer advocates agree on the scale of the problem even as they disagree sharply on the cause. New Jersey requires higher minimum liability coverage than most states, and its own Department of Rate Counsel data shows that trend accelerating this year. Bodily injury liability minimums rose from $15,000 per person and $30,000 per accident to $25,000 and $50,000 in an earlier phase, with a second phase taking those limits to $35,000 per person and $70,000 per accident in 2026.
Christine O’Brien, president of the Insurance Council of New Jersey, traces the current spike to five laws passed between 2019 and 2024 that made crash-related lawsuits more lucrative for plaintiffs. Those measures let accident victims claim up to $250,000 in “uncompensated economic loss” in civil suits, require drivers to disclose their policy limits to opposing attorneys, lower the burden of proof in bad-faith lawsuits against insurers, and raise minimum liability limits for both private and commercial drivers.
O’Brien told the New Jersey Monitor the market had finally settled after 20 years of turbulence, describing 15 years of quiet, healthy competition among carriers before the recent run of legislation. “These laws put us on a train heading backwards,” she said.
State Sen. Jon Bramnick, who sponsored some of the legislation, rejects the idea that lawmakers created the problem. He points to a 9% rise in statewide crashes, from 217,778 in 2022 to 236,601 in 2024, as the real driver of costs. “Nobody wants to pay the rates until they’re injured,” he said. “Then all of a sudden, it’s: ‘Oh, you mean I only get $15,000 in medical coverage?'”
Regulators Approve Most Requests, but Not All of Them
Brian Lipman, the state’s ratepayer advocate, reviews any rate hike request above 7%. His office has flagged roughly 30% of the more than 300 increases sought from 2022 onward for closer scrutiny, but the state Department of Banking and Insurance still approved 69 double-digit hikes in that span. In 2024, the department cut Harleysville Insurance Company of New Jersey’s requested 42.1% increase down to 32.5%, and trimmed Metromile Insurance Company’s requested 63.1% hike to 22.9%. Both increases still landed well into double digits.
Department spokeswoman Dawn Thomas said officials do not rubber-stamp requests. She said the agency blocked almost $1.2 billion in proposed premium increases from 2023 onward through its actuarial review process. “The Department recognizes that auto insurance can be a significant expense and takes seriously its responsibility to hold the industry accountable,” Thomas said.
Consumer advocates say a separate factor compounds the pain: New Jersey allows insurers to price policies using credit score, marital status, occupation and education level, none of which relate to how someone drives. The NAACP’s New Jersey conference and two Latino advocacy groups sued the state and the Department of Banking and Insurance over the practice in November. Cuqui Rivera, a founder of the Latino Action Network and one of the plaintiffs, said she once paid three times her current rate for identical coverage before learning to shop around. “I think it’s criminal that the laws in the state of New Jersey can feed off of the most vulnerable communities in this way,” Rivera said.
More Drivers Are Choosing to Break the Law Instead
The consequences show up in New Jersey’s uninsured driver rate, which the Insurance Research Council put at more than 14% in 2023, up from just 3% in 2019. New Jersey requires uninsured motorist coverage as part of a standard policy, so every insured driver in the state effectively subsidizes crashes caused by uninsured motorists.
Michael DeLong, a research and advocacy associate with the Consumer Federation of America, said families facing an unaffordable premium have limited options. “They either have to take public transportation, which is slow and unreliable and does not exist in many areas, or they have to drive illegally, which breaks the law and puts themselves and others at risk and drives up costs for everyone,” DeLong said.
New Jersey’s Increase Is the Largest in the Country
Insurify’s 2026 projection puts New Jersey’s 10.46% increase far ahead of the next closest states, which analysts expect to raise rates by 5% or more. Nevada, California, New York, and Washington, D.C. all fall into that second tier, driven by their own mixes of litigation costs, weather-related claims, and repair inflation. Nationally, the average driver is expected to see costs rise by less than 1%, which means a New Jersey driver’s bill is set to grow roughly 15 times faster than the typical American’s this year.
That gap is not new for the state, but it is widening. New Jersey has ranked among the 10 most expensive states for car insurance for several years running, and the layering of higher mandatory minimum coverage on top of an already elevated cost base pushes the state further from the national norm each renewal cycle. Drivers considering a move for cost reasons alone should note that minimum coverage requirements, not just market competition, now account for a meaningful share of the gap between New Jersey and cheaper states like Idaho.
What New Jersey Drivers Can Do Right Now
Shopping around remains the single most effective move available to drivers stuck with a high renewal quote. Rates for identical coverage can differ by hundreds of dollars between carriers writing policies in the same ZIP code, and New Jersey’s market includes 77 companies competing for business.
Practical steps for New Jersey drivers include the following. Loyalty rarely earns a lower rate, so request quotes from at least three insurers before a policy renews. Ask each insurer directly whether it uses credit score, occupation, or education level in pricing, and request a rating factor breakdown if one is available. Raise the deductible on collision and other-than-collision coverage from $500 to $1,000 to lower the premium, if an emergency fund can cover the difference after a claim. Bundle auto and home or renters coverage with the same carrier, which frequently earns a discount of 10% or more. Ask about a defensive driving course discount, usually available to drivers of any age in New Jersey. Check eligibility for New Jersey’s Special Automobile Insurance Policy, a lower-cost option for Medicaid recipients who do not own a car but occasionally drive.
Drivers who believe they were charged based on a factor unrelated to their driving record can file a complaint with the New Jersey Department of Banking and Insurance at nj.gov/dobi or by calling its consumer hotline at 1-800-446-7467.
Where the Fight Over Rates Goes Next
The bill to bar insurers from using socioeconomic factors in pricing has now been introduced five times in nine years without passing. Advocates blame the number of personal injury attorneys among its sponsors and opponents in the Legislature for the stall. Senate President Nicholas Scutari, a personal injury lawyer, did not respond to a request for comment from the New Jersey Monitor on the conflict-of-interest allegation.
Until the Legislature acts, New Jersey drivers are left managing the fallout on their own. With the state’s minimum liability requirements set to rise again this year and the state’s own regulator approving the bulk of rate requests it reviews, drivers who do not actively shop their policy each renewal are likely to keep paying above the rate the market would otherwise bear.
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