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Why did your auto insurance go up?
Drop in your previous and current monthly premium. We'll show the dollar + percentage increase, the annual cost impact, and whether the hike crosses the threshold where comparing carriers tends to make sense.
The monthly amount from your last renewal. If you pay every six months, divide the six-month total by 6.
The new monthly amount — pulled from your renewal letter or the first bill at the new rate.
In plain English
Your premium went up 25.0% — about $35/month or $420 per year. Above ~10%, comparing 2–3 alternative carriers often surfaces a lower-cost option.
Rule of thumb: Premium increases above 10–15% typically warrant a quick comparison shop. Different carriers reprice their books on different cycles — yours may not be the cheapest option anymore even if it was at the previous renewal.
Estimates are for educational purposes only. Actual auto-insurance premiums vary by provider, state, ZIP code, vehicle, coverage limits, deductibles, driving record, and insurance credit score.
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Significant increase
Your premium jumped 25.0% — about $420 per year.
Increases above 25% are often driven by a single factor (new claim, address change, credit-tier shift, vehicle replacement). It's almost always worth pulling 2–3 alternative quotes.
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