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Georgia Car Insurance Cost: New and Used

Author: Finance Editors

See Georgia car insurance costs for new and used cars. Find what coverage you need, how your car’s value and credit score affect your rate, and where you can cut costs without leaving yourself in trouble.

 

Georgia drivers pay about 10-20% more for car insurance than the national average. High urban traffic concentrations (especially around Atlanta), severe weather exposure, elevated theft rates, and a high percentage of uninsured drivers all push premiums higher.

 
Updated: June 3, 2026
 
 
 
 

Curious about car financing? See real Georgia car loan rates shared by our community.

 
 

Georgia’s 25/50/25 Liability Rule

 

Georgia requires liability insurance to register a vehicle. The state uses a “25/50/25” minimum:

 
  • $25,000 for injuries to one person.
  • $50,000 for injuries to multiple people in one accident.
  • $25,000 for property damage.
 

This coverage pays for damage and injuries you cause to others. It does not cover your own injuries or vehicle damage.

 

Georgia is an at-fault state. If you cause an accident, you’re responsible for the other party’s losses. If your insurance limits run out, you pay the rest out of pocket — or face a lawsuit.

 

MFP Tip: The $25,000 property damage minimum was set when the average car cost a fraction of what it does today. A moderate collision with a newer SUV or truck can easily exceed $25,000 in repairs. If you total someone’s $50,000 vehicle, you’re on the hook for the difference.

 
 
 
 
 
 

Georgia New Car Insurance Cost

 

Your new car monthly premium depends on three main factors: the value of your car, how much coverage you carry, and your credit score. The table below show estimated monthly costs across different scenarios.

 
Car Value Coverage 750+
(Excellent)
700–749
(Good)
650–699
(Fair)
600–649
(Below Fair)
Under $30K Full $222 $260 $286 $498
Standard $161 $189 $207 $361
Liability only $107 $125 $138 $240
$30K–$60K Full $262 $307 $337 $589
Standard $191 $224 $246 $429
Liability only $117 $137 $150 $262
Over $60K Full $323 $379 $416 $725
Standard $232 $272 $299 $521
Liability only $126 $148 $163 $284
 
 
 

Georgia Used Car Insurance Cost

 

Your used car monthly premium depends on three main factors: the value of your car, how much coverage you carry, and your credit score.

 
Car Value Coverage 750+
(Excellent)
700–749
(Good)
650–699
(Fair)
600–649
(Below Fair)
Under $15K Full $129 $151 $166 $290
Standard $108 $127 $140 $243
Liability only $74 $87 $95 $166
$15K–$25K Full $155 $182 $199 $348
Standard $129 $151 $166 $290
Liability only $86 $100 $110 $192
$25K–$40K Full $175 $206 $226 $394
Standard $147 $172 $189 $329
Liability only $92 $108 $119 $207
Over $40K Full $201 $236 $259 $452
Standard $167 $196 $215 $375
Liability only $102 $120 $131 $229
 
 
 
 
 
 

Understanding Coverage Levels

 

Full Coverage: Pays to repair or replace your car (collision and comprehensive) plus covers damage and injuries you cause to others, with higher limits (typically $100,000 per person / $300,000 per accident for injuries, $100,000 for property). Best for newer cars, financed vehicles, or anyone who couldn’t afford to replace their car out of pocket.

 

Standard Coverage: Same protections as full coverage but with lower limits and higher out-of-pocket costs when you file a claim. A middle-ground option that balances protection and cost.

 

Liability Only: Covers damage and injuries you cause to others, but nothing for your own vehicle. Makes sense for older cars where the yearly premium would exceed the car’s value over a few years.

 
 

Credit Scores Can Nearly Double Your Georgia Premium

 

In Georgia, insurers use your credit history to set premiums. Two drivers with identical cars and driving records can pay vastly different amounts based on credit alone.

 

Drivers with excellent credit (750+) pay the lowest rates across every coverage level and car value. Those with fair credit (650-699) typically pay 20-30% more. Drivers with poor credit can pay up to 91% more than the state average — nearly double what a high-credit driver pays for the exact same policy.

 

This credit penalty compounds with other factors. A driver with poor credit insuring an expensive car with full coverage faces premiums that can be double or triple what a high-credit driver pays for the same vehicle.

 

MFP Tip: Before shopping for car insurance, check your credit report for errors. Disputing inaccuracies and improving your score — even by 50 points — can lower your premium more than most discounts.

 
 
 
 
 
 

Picking the Right Coverage in Georgia

 

New Cars

 

If you finance or lease a new car, your lender requires full coverage until you pay off the loan. You don’t have a choice here.

 

Even if you buy outright, full coverage makes sense for new vehicles. A totaled $40,000 car with only liability coverage means you absorb the entire loss.

 

Gap insurance is worth adding for new cars. If your car is totaled, standard insurance pays the current market value — which drops the moment you drive off the lot. Gap insurance pays the difference between what you owe on your loan and what the insurer pays out. Most lenders offer this at purchase, but standalone policies from insurers often cost less.

 
 

Used Cars

 

The decision gets more nuanced with used vehicles. The key question: does paying for collision and comprehensive coverage make financial sense given your car’s value?

 

Here’s a simple test. Look up your car’s current market value (check Kelley Blue Book or similar). Multiply by 10%. If your annual collision and comprehensive premium exceeds that number, liability-only coverage may be the better bet.

 

Example: Your car is worth $8,000. Ten percent is $800. If your collision and comprehensive costs $900/year, you’re paying more than 10% of the car’s value just to insure against total loss. At that ratio, you’d break even in less than nine years of premium payments — and cars depreciate faster than that.

 

MFP Tip: Reassess your coverage each year. A car worth $20,000 three years ago may only be worth $12,000 today. The coverage that made sense at purchase might not make sense now.

 
 

25/50/25 Won’t Cover an I-285 Pileup

 

The 25/50/25 minimums look affordable on paper. In practice, they create gaps that can wreck your finances.

 
 

When You Damage Someone’s Property

 

Average vehicle repair costs after a collision exceed $4,000 for minor damage. A moderate accident with a newer SUV or truck can hit $15,000-$30,000. Your $25,000 limit covers part of that — but if you total a $50,000 vehicle, you owe the difference. Multi-vehicle accidents on Atlanta’s interstates can easily exceed $100,000 in property damage alone.

 
 

If You Injure Someone

 

Medical costs add up fast. A single ER visit with imaging and minor treatment can exceed $10,000. A serious injury involving surgery, hospitalization, and rehabilitation can reach six figures. Your $25,000 per-person limit won’t come close.

 

Without enough coverage, your personal assets — savings, home equity, future wages — are on the table.

 
 

Nearly 1 in 5 Georgia Drivers Has No Insurance

 

About 18% of Georgia drivers carry no insurance at all — one of the highest rates in the country and well above the national average of 14%. If one of them hits you, your liability coverage doesn’t help. Uninsured motorist coverage fills this gap.

 

Georgia insurers must offer uninsured motorist coverage, but you can decline it in writing. Given the odds, declining is a gamble.

 

MFP Tip: Georgia offers two types of uninsured motorist coverage: “Traditional” (which offsets against the at-fault driver’s coverage) and “New” (which stacks on top). “New” coverage costs more but provides better protection if the other driver has minimal insurance.

 
 
 
 
 
 

Tornadoes, Atlanta Traffic, and Dixie Alley: What Shapes Georgia Rates

 

At-Fault State

 

Georgia follows an at-fault system. The driver who causes an accident is responsible for the other party’s damages. This means your liability coverage gets used when you’re at fault, and you can sue (or be sued) for damages beyond insurance limits.

 
 

Severe Weather: Tornadoes, Hail, and Flooding

 

Georgia sits in “Dixie Alley” — a region prone to intense tornadoes, especially from March through May. The state experienced an outbreak of more than 79 tornadoes in 2024 alone, costing $2.4 billion in damages. Hailstorms, flash flooding, and the occasional hurricane remnant also pose risks.

 

Comprehensive coverage pays for weather damage — a car totaled by hail, a flooded vehicle, or tornado debris in your driveway. In Georgia, this coverage matters more than in many states.

 
 

Where You Live Changes Everything

 

Rates vary by ZIP code based on traffic density, accident rates, and theft. Atlanta-area drivers pay some of the highest rates in the state — sometimes 20-30% more than drivers in smaller cities. The metro Atlanta area, home to about 57% of Georgia’s population, has dense traffic, higher accident frequency, and elevated theft rates.

 

Rural areas and smaller cities like Columbus, Macon, or Valdosta typically pay less for identical coverage.

 
 

How to Lower Your Georgia Car Insurance Costs

 

Bundle home and auto. Most insurers offer 10-25% discounts when you carry multiple policies. If you rent, renters insurance bundled with auto often qualifies for the same discount.

 

Take a defensive driving course. Georgia-approved courses can reduce your premium by up to 10%. The course takes a few hours and the discount typically lasts three years.

 

Ask about safe-driver tracking programs. Some insurers offer apps or devices that monitor your driving habits. Safe drivers can earn discounts of 10-30%. If you don’t drive much or avoid hard braking, this can pay off.

 

Compare quotes from multiple carriers. Georgia’s insurance market includes national carriers, regional specialists, and local insurers. Rates for identical coverage can vary by hundreds of dollars per year between companies. Get at least three quotes before deciding.

 

Raise your deductible. Moving from a $500 to a $1,000 deductible (the amount you pay out of pocket before insurance kicks in) typically lowers your premium by 15-20%. Just make sure you can cover the higher amount if you need to file a claim.

 

Improve your credit score. Since Georgia allows credit-based insurance scoring, improving your credit can lower your premium more than almost any other factor. Even a 50-point improvement can make a noticeable difference.

 
 
 
 
 
 

Buying a Car in Georgia? Here’s What to Do

 

Get Insurance Before You Drive

 

Georgia requires proof of insurance before you can legally drive. If you’re buying from a dealer, they won’t release the car without it. If you’re buying private-party, you’re uninsured the moment you take the keys without a policy in place.

 

Call your insurer before finalizing the purchase. Most can add a vehicle to your policy within minutes and email proof of insurance immediately. Georgia uses an electronic insurance verification system (GEICS), so your coverage must be reported to the state database.

 
 

Register and Title Your Vehicle

 

Registration deadlines depend on how you purchased the vehicle:

 
  • Dealer purchase: 30 days from the date of purchase to register.
  • Private-party purchase: 7 business days from the date of purchase.
 

Visit your County Tag Office and bring:

 
  • Proof of Georgia insurance.
  • The signed title (or dealer paperwork).
  • A valid Georgia driver’s license.
  • Payment for Title Ad Valorem Tax (TAVT) and registration fees.
 

Residents of metro Atlanta counties (including Fulton, DeKalb, Cobb, Gwinnett, and others) must also pass an emissions inspection before registering.

 
 

Review Coverage Annually

 

Your car loses value every year. The full coverage that made sense for a new $35,000 car may not make sense when that car is worth $18,000 five years later. Check your coverage at each renewal and adjust based on your car’s current value.

 
 

End Note

 

Georgia’s minimum requirements keep you legal but leave you exposed. With nearly 1 in 5 drivers uninsured and severe weather a regular occurrence, the gaps in minimum coverage can cost you dearly.

 

Base your coverage decisions on your car’s actual value, your ability to absorb a loss, and the real costs of accidents — not just state minimums. Use the rate tables above to estimate what you’ll pay, then shop around. A few hours comparing quotes can save you hundreds per year without sacrificing the protection you need.