Car Insurance
(Even If You’re a Safe Driver)
You haven’t had an accident in years. No tickets. Same car. Same commute. Yet your car insurance premium just went up again.
At Palermo Law, we understand how frustrating insurance increases are, and it’s something I hear from clients all the time. People assume they must have done something wrong to warrant an insurance premium increase. Yet, in most cases, they didn’t.
The reality is that your car insurance rates don’t just reflect your driving record. They reflect what’s happening across the entire community. That includes the roads that you drive, the courts in the jurisdiction you live in, and the insurance industry itself.
As a Long Island personal injury attorney, I deal with insurance companies every day. Here’s what’s actually driving these increases and what it means for you.
Car insurance is a shared risk system. Your premium is not based only on your personal driving record. That’s important. But it’s not the only consideration. It is also based on what insurers are paying out across the board in your community.
That includes:
On Long Island, where traffic is dense and roads like the Long Island Expressway, Sunrise Highway, and Northern State Parkway are heavily traveled, claim frequency and severity both play a role in how insurers price risk.
For example, if there is a significant number of injury claims in Suffolk County in 2026, the industry will react by increasing rates a bit on policy holders to make up for the additional expense.
Even if you’ve done everything right, you are still part of that larger pool.
This is not just happening to you. Rates have been rising nationwide, and sharply.
There are several key reasons behind this.
Today’s cars are more expensive to fix. Molded bumpers, sensors, cameras, and advanced safety systems mean even a minor collision can lead to significant repair bills. I was recently rear-ended and my vehicle was barely dented. The cost of the repair was astronomical because my car has sensors and cameras in the rear, all of which had to be replaced.
Healthcare costs continue to rise, and that directly affects claim payouts for injuries. Many people injured in accidents use no-fault insurance to pay for their treatment. These bills add up and are eventually passed on to the consumer in the form of increased rates.
Across the country, insurers are paying more to resolve injury claims. This is in part due to inflation. But also, due to an increase in serious accidents. Larger verdicts and settlements increase the overall cost of doing business.
Injured in an Accident?
If you’ve been injured in a car accident on Long Island, understanding your coverage is only half the battle. Contact Palermo Law for a free consultation at any of our 9 Long Island offices.
One of the biggest shifts, and one most people do not think about, is how driving behavior changed after the pandemic.
During COVID, traffic dropped. Roads were wide open. Drivers started going faster and they became accustomed to driving at fast speeds.
That behavior did not fully go away.
In simple terms, we are not just seeing more accidents. We are seeing more serious accidents.
Fewer minor collisions. More high impact crashes. More severe injuries.
When claims become more severe, insurance costs go up. Who would have known Covid would affect the way people drive?
Insurance pricing is not set in stone. It is constantly being re-evaluated by insurance carriers.
Even if nothing about your driving has changed, other factors may have:
Insurers regularly adjust premiums based on newly received information. That means your rate can change even when your personal situation stays exactly the same. In fact, you would think you’d be rewarded for another year of no claims. Unfortunately, that’s not how the insurance industry works.
This is where a lot of people start to question what is happening.
Insurance companies use data to predict customer behavior, including how likely someone is to shop around.
This may not be about anything improper. It could just be how pricing models work.
But the result is that staying with the same insurer year after year does not always guarantee the best rate. In fact, many of my clients report better rates from new carriers when they shop around.
Most increases do not happen all at once. They happen gradually.
There is often no clear trigger. No accident. No ticket. So it feels arbitrary.
In reality, it is usually a combination of market wide cost increases, changing risk information, and industry pricing models trying to stay ahead of the game.
There are a few practical steps that can help:
Many drivers do not revisit their policy until something goes wrong. By then, it is too late to fix coverage gaps.
Of all the items on that list, coverage review deserves the most attention. Many people carry the same policy they bought years ago without ever questioning whether it still makes sense. Deductibles, liability limits, and optional coverages that seemed adequate at the time may no longer reflect your actual situation or the current cost of accidents.
Pay particular attention to your uninsured and underinsured motorist coverage, commonly referred to as UM and SUM in New York. As noted above, uninsured and underinsured drivers are more common than most people realize. If you are seriously injured by a driver who has no insurance or insufficient coverage to compensate you for your injuries, your own UM/SUM coverage becomes your primary financial protection. Minimum coverage levels may not come close to covering the cost of a serious injury, lost wages, or long-term medical care.
Shopping around is also worth doing more regularly than most people do. Rates vary meaningfully between carriers for the same coverage, and loyalty to a single insurer rarely translates into the best pricing. Getting a few competing quotes at renewal costs nothing and takes less time than most people expect. If you find a better rate, either switch or use it as leverage with your current carrier.
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Uninsured
Driver Has No Insurance Your UM coverage steps in to pay for your injuries when the at-fault driver has none.
Required in New York
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Underinsured
Driver Has Too Little Your SUM coverage bridges the gap when the other driver cannot fully cover your losses.
Optional but Recommended
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The Risk
Minimum Limits Are Not Enough State minimums rarely cover serious injuries, lost wages, or long-term medical care.
NY Minimum: $25,000
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Review your UM/SUM limits before you need them, not after an accident.
Many Long Island drivers carry the same policy they bought years ago. Coverage that seemed adequate then may fall far short today.
This is where it really matters.
We see it all the time. People carry what they think is solid coverage, only to find out after an accident that it is not enough.
Minimum policies are often inadequate.
Uninsured and underinsured drivers are more common than people realize.
Insurance companies are focused on limiting what they pay, not maximizing your recovery.
Understanding how insurance works is one thing. Dealing with it after an accident is another.
At Palermo Law, we handle these cases every day. We understand how insurers evaluate claims, how they defend them, and what it takes to build a case the right way from the start.
If you have been injured in an accident, you do not have to navigate that process alone.
Rates are typically reviewed at each renewal period, which is usually every six or twelve months. Insurers can also adjust pricing mid-cycle based on market conditions, updated regional risk data, or changes to their internal pricing models.
In my experience the opposite is true. Insurers often offer more competitive pricing to attract new customers, while long-term policyholders see gradual increases over time. Shopping around at each renewal is the most reliable way to ensure you are getting a fair rate.
In my experience, yes. Comparing quotes across carriers, adjusting your deductible, bundling policies, and asking about available discounts can really reduce your premium. Just be careful that any changes do not leave you underinsured, particularly for uninsured and underinsured motorist coverage.
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