Bodily injury per person
$30,000
This is the current single-person bodily injury liability floor. Higher limits can cost more, but a lower quoted limit is not the current California minimum.
California auto insurance price desk
Compare one California ZIP across a 30 plus carrier panel, hold the coverage level steady, and rank the cheapest comparable auto insurance option first. The page starts with the current legal minimum, then shows how the panel hunt works without inventing carrier prices.
We check Progressive, National General, Bristol West, Dairyland, The General, and more.
One Client's Drop
Was $189/mo
$49/mo
One California client was paying $189/mo. After we ran the panel, they pay $49/mo. Your rate depends on your file.
The cheapest legal California auto policy starts with the floor, not with a carrier slogan. The current floor in the research artifact is 30/60/15: $30,000 bodily injury per person, $60,000 bodily injury per accident, and $15,000 property damage per accident. That is the starting checkpoint for this page. A quote can be cheap only if it stays above that line.
Bodily injury per person
$30,000
This is the current single-person bodily injury liability floor. Higher limits can cost more, but a lower quoted limit is not the current California minimum.
Bodily injury per accident
$60,000
This is the current total bodily injury liability floor for one accident. It is the second number in the 30/60/15 shorthand.
Property damage per accident
$15,000
This is the current property damage liability floor. It is the line that responds to damage the insured driver causes to another vehicle or property.
A low auto insurance quote that falls below the current floor is not a win. It is a broken comparison. California drivers have to maintain financial responsibility, and the quote has to survive that requirement before it is worth ranking. The plan for this page uses California Vehicle Code Section 16056 for the minimum, Section 16020 for the duty to maintain financial responsibility, and Section 16028 for proof of insurance when a driver is asked to show it.
That matters because old California auto insurance copy still shows 15/30/5 in a lot of places. The research artifact treats 15/30/5 as the pre-2025 floor, effective only through 2024-12-31. This page uses that older number only as historical context. If a shopper is comparing a renewal, the useful question is not whether the old floor used to be cheaper. The useful question is whether the current quote meets 30/60/15 and whether another carrier can beat it at the same limit.
The legal floor is also not the same as the right stopping point for every driver. A paid-off older sedan may only need liability-only if the driver accepts that their own car is not covered after an at-fault crash. A financed vehicle usually needs collision and comprehensive because the lender wants its collateral protected. A driver with assets to protect may want higher liability limits. Our price-desk rule is to keep those choices visible and then rank the cheapest comparable option.
Cheap Auto Insurance CA keeps the comparison blunt: same California ZIP, same vehicle, same driver list, same driving record, same coverage level, then carrier rank. If one quote quietly drops property damage, skips a household driver, or removes full coverage from a financed car, it is not a cheaper version of the same policy. It is a different policy. The current 30/60/15 floor is the bottom rail that keeps the bargain from turning into a coverage trap.
Pre-2025 bodily injury per person
$15,000
Historical context only. Old 15/30/5 language should not be treated as the current floor.
Pre-2025 bodily injury per accident
$30,000
Historical context only. This was the second number in the former California minimum.
Pre-2025 property damage per accident
$5,000
Historical context only. This older property damage floor is below the current 30/60/15 requirement.
Core legal citations: California Vehicle Code Section 16056, California Vehicle Code Section 16020, California Vehicle Code Section 16028.
Consumer and proof context: California Department of Insurance automobile guide, California DMV financial responsibility guide.
Use 30/60/15 as the cheap-policy starting line. From there, compare liability-only, higher liability, or full coverage as separate choices. The page links down to the carrier ledger so the shopper can see how the rank is supposed to work before starting a quote. Jump to the carrier ledger.
These are CA industry-average annual rates per the research artifact, expressed as approximate monthly figures (annual rate divided by twelve). They are NOT brand-quoted prices. The $49/mo figure shown in the hero is what one client paid on our panel, not a California average. Your real rate depends on ZIP, vehicle, driving record, household drivers, and coverage level. The ledger is sorted lowest comparable industry average first to make the panel rank visible at a glance.
| Carrier | Recent client rate | Deal badge |
|---|---|---|
| Mercury Insurance | ~$108/mo (CA industry avg) | California-local |
| GEICO | ~$113/mo (CA industry avg) | Fast online lookup |
| State Farm | ~$119/mo (CA industry avg) | Clean-record lookup |
| AAA Insurance | ~$126/mo (CA industry avg) | Membership-aware |
| Progressive | ~$130/mo (CA industry avg) | High-risk friendly |
| Farmers Insurance | ~$140/mo (CA industry avg) | Standard market |
| Allstate | ~$143/mo (CA industry avg) | National brand |
| National General | ~$154/mo (CA industry avg) | High-risk friendly |
The panel is a price-discovery surface. It is not a promise that every carrier writes every driver, every vehicle, or every coverage combination. California carrier appetite changes by ZIP, record, household driver list, lapse history, vehicle, mileage, and coverage level. The useful comparison keeps the input steady and lets the carriers compete on the same policy request.
The research artifact names State Farm, Progressive, GEICO, Farmers Insurance, Mercury Insurance, AAA Insurance, Allstate, and National General as niche carrier references. The brand config names Progressive, National General, Bristol West, Dairyland, and The General as the default comparison panel. This page uses those names as lookup lanes, not as a guaranteed winner. The ledger uses artifact-grounded CA industry averages only as a shopping reference, while every actual quote remains profile-specific.
Progressive and National General are marked high-risk friendly in the research artifact. That does not mean they are cheapest for every California driver. It means they stay in the rank for cases where a clean-record-only carrier may tighten appetite. A recent ticket, lapse, or accident can reorder the panel fast. A clean-record driver in one ZIP may see a standard carrier lead, while a driver with recent activity may need a broader appetite carrier before the quote is even bindable.
The National Association of Insurance Commissioners and the Insurance Information Institute both explain auto insurance as a consumer-shopping problem, not a mascot problem. The shopper compares liability, collision, comprehensive, deductibles, and optional protections. Cheap Auto Insurance CA adds the blunt price-desk layer: compare those pieces at the same level, then show the lower number first. The cheapest quote is useful only when the policy parts are comparable.
Clean-record lookup
Included as a mainstream carrier reference. The page does not claim State Farm is cheapest; it treats the carrier as a useful benchmark for cleaner California profiles.
Broad-panel lookup
Marked high-risk friendly in the research artifact. It stays in the rank when a recent ticket, lapse, or accident could change the carrier order.
Fast online lookup
Useful for speed and clean comparisons, but the page still checks the panel because online speed does not prove the final rate is the cheapest comparable choice.
Standard-market lookup
Included as a California carrier reference for shoppers who want a mainstream name in the comparison before deciding on price.
California-local lookup
Included because California-only appetite can matter. The page avoids a dollar claim and keeps the result driver-specific.
Membership-aware lookup
Useful when a shopper already has AAA context, but membership or package advantages still need to beat the open panel on the same coverage.
National-brand lookup
Included as a familiar carrier reference. Familiarity does not decide the cheapest comparable rate; the quote rank does.
High-risk-friendly lookup
Marked high-risk friendly in the research artifact. It remains a practical lane when standard appetite tightens.
Shopping-process references: NAIC auto insurance consumer guide, Insurance Information Institute auto basics.
For vehicle-safety context that can affect the broader shopping conversation, see IIHS vehicle ratings. The panel earns its keep when it catches a carrier-order change before renewal money leaves the account. The shopper is not asked to believe a universal winner. The shopper is shown the lowest comparable option for their own California facts, with every carrier-specific price still hedged until the quote is sourced.
Cheap California auto insurance rates rarely come from one big carrier deal. They come from stacking smaller discounts each carrier files with the California Department of Insurance. The discounts below are common shopping levers reported in the NAIC consumer auto guide. Each lever changes the monthly rate by a different amount per carrier, ZIP, and driver profile, so treat the percentages as signals to verify before you bind, not promises.
20%
California has a mandatory good-driver framework under Insurance Code Section 1861.025. Clean-record drivers should always check whether the carrier is honoring the discount before renewal.
15%
Bundling auto with renters or homeowners can stack only when the bundled price actually beats the standalone auto quote on the same coverage level.
12%
Avoiding installment fees can lower the effective monthly cost. Useful only when a single annual payment is realistic for the household budget.
5%
Small discount, easy to stack, and usually does not require a sales call. Stack it with the other levers to compound the saving.
10%
Available with carriers that recognize active duty or veteran status. Members can also see whether eligibility-restricted carriers like USAA come in cheaper than the open panel.
8%
Drivers under 25 with qualifying GPA can lower the family premium. Distant-student rules can also help when the student is away at school.
The discount stack is a checklist, not a guarantee. Run the panel with each lever applied, then compare the stacked rate against the current bill on the same coverage level. If the stack still does not beat the renewal, keep the current carrier. The comparison is honest only when the cheaper option also clears the current 30/60/15 floor. NAIC consumer auto guide discount survey, CA Insurance Code Section 1861.025 mandatory good-driver framework, CDC motor vehicle safety overview.
A fast comparison is useful only when the intake is tight. Cheap Auto Insurance CA keeps the request short, but it still collects the facts that change a California rate. The method below is the page workflow: collect the rating inputs, hold them steady, run the panel, then decide whether the current carrier still deserves the renewal.
Regulator shopping context: California Department of Insurance premium comparison tool.
That is the whole price-desk method. It is deliberately plain because the shopper does not need a bigger story. The shopper needs a current legal floor, a clean set of inputs, a carrier panel, and a quote rank that does not hide coverage changes behind a smaller monthly number. Jump to deal alerts.
Carrier advertising can be useful, but it is not the same thing as a California panel comparison. This page does not say a national carrier is bad. It says a single-carrier quote is only one lane, and one lane can miss the cheapest comparable option when the driver record, ZIP, or coverage level changes.
State Farm can be competitive for clean-record drivers, but appetite can tighten when the file includes a recent ticket, accident, lapse, or other rating issue. The panel keeps Progressive and National General in the lookup for that exact case because the research artifact marks both as high-risk friendly.
No carrier-specific rate is claimed here. The winning price varies by driver, ZIP, vehicle, record, and coverage level.
GEICO can be fast online, and speed matters. Speed still does not prove the final quote is the cheapest comparable California quote. The panel rank checks whether stacked discounts, broader appetite, or another carrier order beats the single online lane.
No universal winner is named. The page links shoppers to regulator shopping context instead of inventing a monthly spread.
Mercury and AAA can make sense for California-specific profiles and membership-aware shoppers. They still need to be compared against carriers that travel better across driver histories, moves, lapse situations, and payment structures.
The cheap quote is real only after the same facts are held steady. Otherwise a lower number can just be a lower-coverage quote.
Regulator comparison surface: California DOI automobile premium comparison tool.
Use single-carrier quotes as inputs, not verdicts. The verdict is the cheapest comparable rate that meets the current California floor and the shopper coverage choice.
This service page is the top auto insurance pillar for Cheap Auto Insurance CA. It should send price shoppers up to the broad auto insurance hub, sideways into comparison and how-to pages, and down into California city pages where ZIP context matters.
Pillar up-link
Auto insurance hubThe primary California auto insurance pillar for the brand, focused on the current floor and carrier-ledger comparison.
Explains the required liability floor and when minimum coverage is only a starting point.
Separates the cheapest legal option from the lender-driven full-coverage requirement.
Shows how to hold ZIP, vehicle, record, and coverage steady before choosing a carrier.
The deeper car-insurance service page for line-item coverage, lender rules, and underwriting checks.
Compares the panel approach against a broad carrier that often remains useful for high-risk files.
Compares the brand against another broad-appetite lane for California price shoppers.
Local rate context for LA County drivers and dense metro ZIPs.
Local context for San Diego County, North County, and coastal commute patterns.
Local context for Bay Area garaging, parking density, and city driving exposure.
Local context for Sacramento County and the I-80 corridor.
Local context for Fresno County and Central Valley rating pressure.
The link set is intentionally broad because this page is a pillar. A shopper can climb up to the hub, compare two carrier alternatives, read the supporting how-to guides, or jump into a city page before starting the quote.