The fastest answer: the average Arizona driver pays around $1,800 per year for full coverage auto insurance and around $690 for state-minimum coverage in 2026. But that average hides a wide range. A 25-year-old driver in central Phoenix with a clean record might pay $1,400 a year. A 19-year-old in Scottsdale with one at-fault claim could pay closer to $4,500.
Average Arizona car insurance costs in 2026
Statewide averages (full coverage, clean driving record):
- Phoenix metro: $1,750 to $2,100 per year
- Scottsdale: $1,650 to $1,950 per year
- Tucson: $1,800 to $2,150 per year
- Mesa, Tempe, Chandler: $1,600 to $1,900 per year
- Statewide minimum coverage: $600 to $750 per year
What actually moves your rate
After 23 years writing policies in Arizona, the seven factors that move premiums most:
- ZIP code. Scottsdale (85258, 85254) runs 10 to 15 percent lower than central Phoenix.
- Age. Drivers under 25 pay roughly twice what drivers between 35 and 55 pay.
- Credit-based insurance score. Arizona weighs this heavily. Strong credit can save 20 percent or more.
- Driving record. One at-fault accident raises rates an average of 41 percent for three years.
- The vehicle. A 2018 Honda Civic and a 2024 Tesla Model Y can differ by $1,200 a year.
- Coverage limits. Going from state minimum to 100/300/100 plus uninsured motorist costs $200 to $350 more per year.
- Bundling. Pairing auto with home insurance saves Arizona clients 15 to 25 percent on both.
Should you carry just the state minimum?
Almost never. Arizona minimum is 25/50/15, which means at most $25,000 per injured person, $50,000 total per accident, $15,000 property damage. The average new vehicle on the road today costs more than $48,000. One serious injury can run into the hundreds of thousands. Above your limit, you are personally liable: wages, savings, home.
Raising liability limits to 100/300/100 usually costs about $15 a month. It is the single best protection upgrade most clients make.
How to actually lower your premium
- Bundle auto and home. Biggest single discount in this state.
- Raise your deductibles from $500 to $1,000. Saves 10 to 15 percent.
- Defensive driving discounts. Arizona accepts state-approved courses for 5 to 10 percent off.
- Paperless billing and autopay. 3 to 5 percent discount, 30 seconds to set up.
- Low-mileage rate if you drive under 7,500 miles a year.
- Improve your credit.
When to shop your policy
Every two to three years, or whenever:
- You move ZIP codes
- You add or remove a driver
- You buy or sell a vehicle
- An accident or ticket falls off your record
- You pay off a car (you can usually drop collision)
Get an Arizona quote
For a real number on your situation, call (480) 922-8820 or request a quote online. We work with multiple carriers and show side-by-side comparisons.
Damien Barr has been licensed in Arizona since 2003 and holds the CPCU, ARM, AINS, and CRIS designations. Barr Insurance serves Scottsdale, Phoenix, and all of Arizona.