Michigan personal auto insurance affordability has improved markedly since the state enacted significant auto insurance reform in 2019, according to a new report, Personal Auto Insurance Affordability in Michigan, published by the Insurance Research Council (IRC), a division of The Institutes.
In 2022 (the latest year for which expenditure data is available), personal auto insurance expenditures accounted for 1.9% of the median household income in Michigan, a decline of 0.5 percentage points from the pre-reform peak. However, Michigan’s expenditure share remains higher than the percentage in the overall U.S. and 44 other states, due largely to its unique no-fault system and generous medical benefits.
Key findings:
- Before the reforms, Michigan drivers were required to purchase unlimited personal injury protection (PIP) coverage; in comparison, the second highest mandated amount of PIP coverage was $50,000 in New York. The unlimited medical benefits and other features, such as attendant care benefits and no medical fee schedule, led to Michigan’s extremely high average auto injury claim severity, which has been the primary cost driver in the state.
- In 2022, the most recent year for which information is currently available, Michigan households spent $1,319 to insure each vehicle, nearly 20% above the national average. However, in the years since reform, expenditures have fallen in Michigan while increasing in almost every other state. From 2019 to 2022, the average expenditure for auto insurance in Michigan fell 12% compared with an increase of 5% in the U.S. overall.
- Uninsured and underinsured motorists are both a symptom and cause of affordability issues. In 2019, Michigan had the highest rate of uninsured drivers in the country, with more than one in four motorists lacking the required liability coverage. The uninsured motorist rate in Michigan dropped five percentage points between 2020 and 2022.
“Efforts to improve auto insurance affordability in Michigan must begin with the underlying cost drivers: injury claim severity and litigation,” said Dale Porfilio, FCAS, MAAA, president of the IRC. “The average amount paid per auto claim for auto injury insurance is dramatically higher in Michigan, more than double the U.S. average and one and a half times the second highest state.”
Porfilio, who is also chief insurance officer at the Insurance Information Institute (Triple-I), noted that the 2022 affordability data does not fully reflect many recent countrywide challenges to affordability, such as economic inflation, higher replacement costs, legal system abuse, and deteriorating driving behavior.
“However, the movement of several key indicators illustrate the positive effect of the Michigan policymakers’ efforts to improve affordability in their state,” Porfilio said.
About Insurance Research Council
The Insurance Research Council (IRC), affiliated with The Institutes, is an independent, nonprofit research organization supported by leading property and casualty insurance companies and associations. IRC provides timely and reliable research to all parties involved in public policy issues affecting insurance companies and their customers. IRC does not lobby or advocate legislative positions.
About The Institutes | Risk and Insurance Knowledge Group
The Institutes, a leading provider of risk management and insurance knowledge solutions, offer innovative education, research, networking, and career resources, including professional designations such as the CPCU® program, leadership programs, continuing education courses, events and conferences, associations, custom solutions, publications, and assessment tools.
CPCU is a registered trademark of The Institutes. All rights reserved.
View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20240731805208/en/
“Efforts to improve #autoinsurance affordability in #Michigan must begin with the underlying cost drivers: injury #claim severity and #litigation." - Dale Porfilio, president, Insurance Research Council
Contacts
Loretta Worters
New York Press Office
917-208-8842
lorettaw@iii.org