Electric Vehicle (EV)-specific guidance
Auto-Owners Electric Vehicle (EV) Insurance in Idaho
Auto-Owners typically costs ~25% more for EVs than sedans in Idaho — here's the math, the electric vehicle (ev)-specific coverage gotchas Auto-Owners drivers should verify, and 3 cheaper alternatives most Idaho electric vehicle (ev) owners overlook.
Electric Vehicle (EV) annual premium
$1,075
Monthly
$90
Sedan baseline
$850
Electric Vehicle (EV) premium
+25%
Why EVs cost 25% more to insure
EVs cost ~25% more to insure than gas sedans nationwide. The drivers: (1) specialty battery + drivetrain parts cost 2-3x conventional components, (2) collision shops capable of EV repair are scarcer and charge premium labor rates, (3) Mitchell 2024 data shows EV collision repairs run $5,200 avg vs $4,000 for ICE vehicles.
Common EVs Auto-Owners insures in Idaho: Tesla Model 3, Tesla Model Y, Ford Mustang Mach-E, Hyundai Ioniq 5, Chevy Bolt.
Why electric vehicle (ev) drivers pick Auto-Owners
Highest customer-satisfaction scores in the company's 26-state footprint (only USAA scores higher industry-wide). Lowest NAIC complaint ratio of the 14 carriers in this matrix.
Where Auto-Owners falls short
Not available in 24 states (mostly Pacific + Northeast + parts of the South). Independent-agent-only channel means no direct online quote — you'll need a phone call or agent visit.
Electric Vehicle (EV)-specific coverage gotchas
Confirm your policy explicitly covers OEM battery replacement (some carriers' base coverage caps the battery claim at 50% MSRP — a Tesla Model Y battery is $13K+). Also verify mobile-charger theft coverage — Tesla mobile connectors are a top theft item.
Discount stack: Most carriers ship an explicit hybrid/EV discount (typically 5-10%). California state credits stack on top — CA Vehicle Code §10758 mandates carriers offer a green-vehicle discount. Verify your quote applies both layers.
Cheaper electric vehicle (ev) insurance alternatives in Idaho
The 3 carriers below typically come in below Auto-Owners for electric vehicle (ev) coverage in Idaho. Each link goes to their electric vehicle (ev)-specific landing page so you can compare apples to apples.
Auto-Owners electric vehicle (ev) vs Idaho state average: -2.3% below the $1,100/yr state average across all carriers + vehicle classes.
See the full Auto-Owners × Idaho review (all vehicle classes)Frequently asked questions
How much does Auto-Owners electric vehicle (ev) insurance cost in Idaho?
Based on CarSavr's 2026 rate modeling, a typical full-coverage electric vehicle (ev) policy with Auto-Owners in Idaho runs about $1,075/year (~$90/month) for a 35-year-old driver with a clean record and 720+ FICO. That's 25% more than the sedan baseline ($850/yr) — the standard industry premium for EVs.
Why are EVs more expensive to insure than sedans?
EVs cost ~25% more to insure than gas sedans nationwide. The drivers: (1) specialty battery + drivetrain parts cost 2-3x conventional components, (2) collision shops capable of EV repair are scarcer and charge premium labor rates, (3) Mitchell 2024 data shows EV collision repairs run $5,200 avg vs $4,000 for ICE vehicles.
What Auto-Owners electric vehicle (ev) coverage should I verify in Idaho?
Confirm your policy explicitly covers OEM battery replacement (some carriers' base coverage caps the battery claim at 50% MSRP — a Tesla Model Y battery is $13K+). Also verify mobile-charger theft coverage — Tesla mobile connectors are a top theft item.
Is Auto-Owners the cheapest electric vehicle (ev) insurer in Idaho?
Auto-Owners typically runs about 2% below the Idaho state average for all carriers combined, even at the electric vehicle (ev) class premium. Always quote multiple carriers — vehicle class is one of the strongest premium drivers and savings move by hundreds per year.
Methodology: Estimated annual electric vehicle (ev) premium is computed as Auto-Owners's national average ($1,395) × Idaho's state-vs-national premium index (≈0.61x) × the Electric Vehicle (EV) risk multiplier (×1.25 per NAIC + III rate-filing 2023-2024). Actual quotes vary by ±15-25% based on driver age, ZIP code, specific vehicle make/model/year, mileage, and coverage selections. Sources: NAIC rate-filings 2023-2024, J.D. Power 2024 U.S. Auto Insurance Study, Mitchell 2024 Industry Trends Report (EV repair severity). Auto-Owners J.D. Power score: 850/1000. A.M. Best rating: A++ (2024).