You Retired.
Your Insurance
Rates Didn't.
The average retired driver overpays $847 per year for coverage built around a commute they no longer make.
Source: Consumer Reports 2024 Auto Insurance Survey · National average savings after policy audit
Figures represent national averages for drivers 65+ with <7,000 mi/year
The Numbers They Don't Put on the Renewal Notice
Insurance companies recalibrate rates upward every year. They don't recalibrate them downward when you stop commuting. This is what that costs you.
Average full-coverage premium in 2025 — a 78% increase over the past decade
National average, 2025
Of policyholders reported premium increases of $50–$199 in the last 12 months
Consumer Reports, 2024 Auto Insurance Survey (n=40,566)
Estimated annual overpayment for retired drivers still carrying commuter-era coverage
Shield analysis of NAIC data + Consumer Reports 2024
Median annual savings reported by drivers who switched insurers in the past 5 years
Consumer Reports, 2024 (n=12,170 switchers)
Of in-force policies were shopped at least once in 2024 — including 10+ year customers
J.D. Power 2024 Insurance Shopping Study
Maximum discount available for low-mileage drivers — a benefit most agents never mention
Insurance carrier rate filings, 2025
"After about 40 years of dropping rates, the average cost of car insurance hits an uptick at age 60."
— Insurance rate analysis, 2025. The increase continues annually, compounding against fixed-income retirees.
Five Lines on Your Policy. Four of Them Written for Someone Else.
This is the comparison table your current agent never showed you. Each row is a coverage line you're likely carrying — audited against what a retired driver with your profile actually needs.
Click any row to read the rationale
This table is built on national averages.
Yours will be specific.
Your actual savings depend on your zip code, current insurer, mileage, and vehicle. The audit takes 8 seconds to start.
Get Your Free Policy AuditSix Discounts Available to You. How Many Is Your Agent Applying?
These aren't obscure loopholes. They're published discount programs at major carriers. They require you to ask — or to work with someone whose job is to ask for you.
Low-Mileage Rate
Drivers under 7,000 miles/year qualify for significantly reduced premiums. Most agents don't offer this proactively — you have to ask.
Retirees no longer commuting. Widows running errands. Snowbirds with a second vehicle.
Low-mileage drivers save avg. $136/yr vs. high-mileage (NAIC 2025)
Garage Storage Credit
Vehicles garaged overnight — in a private garage, not a driveway — qualify for reduced theft and weather damage premiums at most carriers.
Snowbirds storing a vehicle for 6 months. Anyone with an enclosed garage.
Available at Allstate, GEICO, State Farm, Farmers
Defensive Driving Course
A 6–8 hour course from AAA or AARP earns a discount that renews every 2–3 years. GEICO offers up to 25% for completing their approved course.
Any licensed driver 55+. Most states require insurers to offer this by law.
GEICO: up to 25% · AAA/AARP certified courses
Home + Auto Bundle
Bundling your homeowners or condo policy with your auto policy at the same carrier typically yields 5–20% off both. Almost never volunteered.
Homeowners, condo owners, renters with renters insurance.
Industry average bundle savings: $173/yr (ValuePenguin 2025)
Pay-in-Full Discount
Paying your 6-month or annual premium upfront instead of monthly eliminates installment fees and earns a carrier discount. Rarely mentioned at renewal.
Any policyholder who can absorb the lump payment.
Average savings: $47–$94/yr depending on premium level
Usage-Based / Pay-Per-Mile
Programs like Nationwide SmartMiles, State Farm Drive Safe & Save, and GEICO DriveEasy base your premium on actual miles driven. Ideal for under-7,000 mi/yr drivers.
Anyone driving fewer than 10,000 miles per year. Most effective under 7,000.
Nationwide SmartMiles (44 states) · State Farm: up to 30% · GEICO DriveEasy
If You Applied All Six Discounts
Conservative estimate based on national average premiums, 2025
Your actual figure depends on your insurer, zip code, vehicle, and driving history. The audit calculates it precisely.
Get My Exact Number →Eight Seconds to Find Out What You're Actually Owed
Three fields. No credit card. No commitment. Just the numbers.
2,340 retired drivers audited their policies this month
A 12-page breakdown of how insurers quietly profit from retired drivers — and the seven questions to ask your agent at next renewal.
No audit required. No phone call. Just the report.
"I'd been paying $213 a month since 2019. The audit found I qualified for three discounts my agent never mentioned. Down to $141."
"My husband passed and I was driving maybe 3,000 miles a year on his old policy. Shield found a pay-per-mile option that cut my premium in half."