Car Insurance in Florida
Typical full coverage runs $2,700-$3,700 per year – among the highest in America. No-fault rules, hurricanes and uninsured drivers all stack up.
What Drivers Typically Pay
| Coverage level | Typical annual cost |
|---|---|
| Full coverage | $2,700 – $3,700 |
| State minimum | $900 – $1,200 |
Florida requires $10,000 of Personal Injury Protection (PIP) and $10,000 of property damage liability – notably, no bodily injury liability is required, which is why even “minimum” coverage is expensive yet protects you poorly.
Why Florida Costs What It Does
- No-fault PIP system: your insurer pays your injuries regardless of fault – historically a magnet for fraud and inflated claims.
- Hurricane and flood exposure raises comprehensive rates statewide.
- About 1 in 5 drivers is uninsured – among the worst rates in the country.
- Litigation-heavy claims culture, even after recent tort reforms.
How to Pay Less in Florida
- Buy bodily injury liability even though Florida does not force you to – a serious at-fault accident without it can cost you everything you own.
- Add uninsured motorist coverage; the odds the other driver has nothing are high.
- Garage location matters enormously here – quotes between neighboring zip codes can differ 30%.
- Ask about wind/hail deductible options and comprehensive-only adjustments for hurricane season.
Educational estimates from published industry rate studies – not insurance advice. Compare all states in our state-by-state guide or estimate your own premium with the insurance estimator.