Key takeaways
- Liability-only insurance will only cover injuries and/or damage you cause to other people and their property.
- These policies are sometimes referred to as "minimum coverage" because most states only require liability insurance.
- The average cost for a minimum policy is $624, according to our June 2026 analysis.
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What does liability-only car insurance cover?
- Bodily injury liability pays for injuries you cause others in a wreck, except your immediate household family members.
- Property damage liability pays for any damage you cause to someone else’s property, such as vehicles, fences, buildings and government-owned property.
What does liability-only car insurance cost?
- $624 for a good driver with good credit.
- $909 for a driver with an at-fault accident and good credit.
- $1,011 for a good driver with poor credit.
- $1,202 for a driver with a recent DUI and good credit.
Why you can trust NerdWallet’s rates
Average annual cost of minimum car insurance from large companies in the U.S.
| Company | Median rate |
|---|---|
| GEICO | $494 |
| State Farm | $513 |
| Travelers | $546 |
| Progressive | $633 |
| Allstate | $799 |
| American Family | $864 |
| Nationwide | $959 |
| Farmers | $1,248 |
| USAA* | $350 |
*USAA is only available to military, veterans and their families.
Cheapest minimum car insurance rates in each state
Is liability-only auto insurance right for me?
- You can’t afford more than the bare minimum car insurance your state requires. If this is because of a spotty driving record, be sure to get quotes from specialty insurers. Some of them focus on providing auto insurance to high-risk drivers.
- You own a car that’s not worth much and you don’t mind paying out of pocket to repair or replace it. You also have good health insurance and don’t typically have passengers riding with you, as either of these could increase your financial liability after an accident.
- You rarely drive, and you keep your car stored safely.
- You don’t drive at all but want to avoid a lapse in coverage.
- You live in a state that requires more than liability-only coverage.
- You lease or finance your car. Most lenders require full coverage car insurance, which includes multiple types of coverage.
- You can afford more than your state’s minimum requirements. Remember that accidents are expensive and misfortune can strike at any time. You don't know if or when you'll need something like uninsured motorist coverage.
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- $100,000 bodily injury liability coverage per person.
- $300,000 bodily injury liability coverage per crash.
- $50,000 property damage liability coverage per crash.
- $100,000 uninsured motorist bodily injury coverage per person.
- $300,000 uninsured motorist bodily injury coverage per crash.
- Collision coverage with $1,000 deductible.
- Comprehensive coverage with $1,000 deductible.
- For drivers with minimum coverage, we adjusted the numbers above to reflect only the minimum coverage required by law in the state.
- We changed the credit tier from “good” to “poor” as reported to the insurer to see rates for drivers with poor credit. In states where credit isn’t taken into account, we only used rates for “good credit.”
- For drivers with one at-fault crash, we added a single at-fault crash costing $10,000 in property damage.
- For drivers with a DUI, we added a single drunken-driving violation.
- For drivers with a ticket, we added a single speeding violation for driving 16 mph over the speed limit.








