Priya, 38, Marietta — financed Honda CR-V
Lender required full coverage. Compared 4 carriers and found a $40/month difference for identical coverage on her financed SUV. Locked in $158/month with paid-in-full discount.
Compare Georgia carriers offering complete protection — liability, collision, and comprehensive in one policy.
No fees. No obligations. Soft check only — won't affect your credit.
We work with top carriers nationwide
Quick note for drivers needing comprehensive protection
Full coverage in Georgia isn't a single product — it's a combination of liability (state-required), collision, and comprehensive. Lenders require it on financed vehicles; it's optional but often worth it on owned vehicles worth more than $4,500.
Full coverage car insurance in Georgia refers to a policy bundle that includes three components: state-required liability (25/50/25), collision (damage to your vehicle from accidents), and comprehensive (damage from non-accident events like theft, vandalism, fire, weather, or wildlife).
Georgia is a tort/at-fault state, meaning the at-fault driver's liability covers the other party's damages — but your own vehicle is only protected if you carry collision and comprehensive. Without these, an accident you cause leaves you paying for your own car repairs out of pocket.
Full coverage is required by lenders on financed vehicles. For owned vehicles, the rule of thumb is to carry full coverage if your vehicle is worth more than $4,500 — below that, the annual premium often exceeds what the policy would pay out.
Bodily injury and property damage liability at Georgia minimums (25/50/25) or higher. Most full-coverage drivers carry 100/300/100 or higher.
Pays to repair or replace your vehicle after an accident — regardless of fault. Typical deductible: $500 or $1,000.
Pays for non-accident damage: theft, vandalism, fire, falling objects, weather, wildlife strikes. Typical deductible: $250 or $500. Especially valuable in Georgia given hurricane and tornado exposure.
Pays for your injuries and damages if you're hit by a driver with no or insufficient insurance. Especially valuable in Georgia given the ~12% uninsured driver rate.
Full coverage in Georgia averages $1,800/year ($150/month) for a 35-year-old with a clean record — about 12% above the national average. Rates vary significantly by ZIP code, vehicle type, and coverage limits.
Major Georgia metros (Atlanta, Augusta, Savannah) typically run 15–30% above the state average due to traffic density, accident frequency, and vehicle theft.
| Scenario | Typical Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Clean record, age 30+, suburban GA | $118–$165/mo | Most common full-coverage profile in Georgia. |
| Clean record, age 30+, Atlanta metro | $155–$215/mo | Atlanta typically 15–30% above state average. |
| 1 accident in last 3 years | $165–$245/mo | Single accident typically adds 25–50% for 3 years. |
| Young driver (under 25), full coverage | $185–$285/mo | Highest rates due to age-based actuarial risk. |
Full coverage is required on any financed vehicle — your lender mandates it as a condition of the loan. For owned vehicles, the decision comes down to vehicle value and your ability to self-insure.
The general rule: if your vehicle's market value is more than $4,500, full coverage usually pays for itself within a few years. Below that threshold, annual premium for collision and comprehensive often exceeds what the policy would pay out in a total loss.
Georgia adds two specific considerations: hurricane evacuation and storm damage along the coast (Savannah, Brunswick, St. Simons) make comprehensive coverage especially valuable here. Tornado activity across central and northern Georgia also makes comprehensive worth carrying even on older vehicles.
Same-carrier home + auto bundling typically cuts both premiums by 10–20%.
Paying 6 or 12 months upfront often saves 8–15% versus monthly billing.
Programs like Snapshot and Drive Safe & Save reward safe driving with meaningful savings.
Atlanta's higher theft rates mean carriers reward factory anti-theft systems and aftermarket trackers.
Georgia-approved courses unlock discounts and can reduce points on your license.
Required by your lender. Dropping collision/comprehensive while financed violates loan terms and can trigger force-placed insurance at much higher rates.
Full coverage typically pays for itself within 3–4 years if you have any meaningful accident or theft event.
Annual premium for collision and comprehensive often exceeds what the policy would pay in a total loss. Drop to liability-only and self-insure the vehicle.
Illustrative cases based on common situations. Names and details changed for privacy.
Priya, 38, Marietta — financed Honda CR-V
Lender required full coverage. Compared 4 carriers and found a $40/month difference for identical coverage on her financed SUV. Locked in $158/month with paid-in-full discount.
Robert, 44, Savannah — owned vehicle worth $11k
Was paying $185/month for full coverage with $500 deductible. Raised deductible to $1,000 and switched carriers — dropped to $145/month while keeping full coverage including hurricane comprehensive.
Strong claims handling, reliable comprehensive coverage for theft and weather events, largest GA agent network.
Strong app, fast claims processing, competitive full-coverage rates statewide.
Strong regional carrier with sharp full-coverage pricing through independent Georgia agents.
If your vehicle is worth less than $3,000–$4,500, annual premium often exceeds what the policy would pay in a total loss. Drop to liability and self-insure.
Most Georgia drivers default to $500 deductibles. Raising to $1,000 typically saves 10–15% if you have savings to cover the gap.
Georgia's uninsured driver rate (~12%) makes UM one of the highest-value optional coverages. Often only adds $10–$20/month.
Going from $500 to $1,000 typically saves 10–15% on full-coverage premium.
Single largest discount most Georgia drivers can claim — 10–20% off both policies.
Atlanta's theft rates make this especially valuable — factory systems and aftermarket trackers unlock discounts.
Get full coverage auto insurance options in Georgia starting from $135/mo.
See Full Coverage Quotes →No fees. No obligations. Soft check only — won't affect your credit.