Car Insurance in Michigan
Typical full coverage runs $2,500-$3,500 per year. Once America’s most expensive state, Michigan’s 2020 no-fault reform gave drivers PIP choices – and homework.
What Drivers Typically Pay
| Coverage level | Typical annual cost |
|---|---|
| Full coverage | $2,500 – $3,500 |
| State minimum | $900 – $1,300 |
Michigan requires 50/100/10 liability plus Personal Injury Protection. Since the 2020 reform you choose your PIP medical level – from unlimited down to opting out if you have qualifying health insurance. Your PIP choice is the single biggest lever on a Michigan premium.
Why Michigan Costs What It Does
- Decades of unlimited no-fault medical benefits built the highest claim costs in the nation; the system is still unwinding.
- Detroit’s rates remain among the highest of any US city.
- High theft and uninsured rates in urban areas feed back into prices.
- Strict insurer fee schedules from the reform are slowly pulling costs down.
How to Pay Less in Michigan
- Review your PIP medical selection – if you have good health insurance that covers auto injuries, a lower PIP level can save hundreds.
- Re-shop every year; reform means insurer prices are still moving and spread widely.
- Check the Michigan Catastrophic Claims Association fee on your policy – it changes annually.
- Anti-theft devices and garaging matter more in Michigan than most states.
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.