Geico General Insurance Co. will cut auto insurance rates for some of its California policyholders by an average of 10.8 percent to comply with state rules requiring rates to be primarily determined by driving records, state insurance officials said.
The rate reductions by the Washington, D.C.-based insurer amount to $65.8 million, the California Department of Insurance said.
The rate cuts will go into effect Aug. 30 and translate into an average savings of $150 per policy, the state said.
“How a person drives is more important than where a person lives,” state Insurance Commissioner Steve Poizner said in a statement.
Byron Tucker, communications director for the insurance department, said he did not know how many of the insurer’s 436,000 California customers would receive a reduction.
The move by Geico comes a year ahead of a state deadline for auto insurers to place greater emphasis on policyholders’ driving records, miles driven and experience than where they live.
Previously, insurers were free to take into account other factors, such as marital status, gender and location.
In addition to Geico, 22 other insurers have complied with the new rate-setting rules, Poizner said.
Topics California Auto
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
PwC: Insurance Execs Say Agentic AI Leading Industry Transformation
The Hartford CEO Takes Lead in Shaping the City of Hartford’s Future
Insurance IPOs Hit 20-Year High on Wall Street
Nonstandard Auto Insurers Continue Profit Momentum in 2025: AM Best 

