Thanks to a decision made March 28 by the California State Supreme Court, insurers can continue adjusting rates based partially on the ZIP code of the driver. The decision to let the First District Court of Appeals ruling stand is good news for insurers and for good drivers, according to industry trade associations. Consumer activist groups, including Harvey Rosenfield’s Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights, had protested that the practice of using ZIP codes in rating drivers violates Prop 103. Personal Insurance Federation of California President Dan Dunmoyer called the protest “a misguided request [that] could have drastically raised insurance rates for good drivers in 51 of the state’s 58 counties.”
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
Two-Thirds of Independent Agencies Plan to Increase AI Use This Year, Survey Says
Former Broker, Co-Defendant Sentenced to 20 Years in Fraudulent ACA Sign-Ups
AIG’s Zaffino: Outcomes From AI Use Went From ‘Aspirational’ to ‘Beyond Expectations’
World’s Growing Civil Unrest Has an Insurance Sting 


