Cheapest EV Car Insurance 2025 – Real Rates for Tesla, Rivian & Every Electric Car
Freshly updated December 2025 – latest Tesla Insurance rates, Rivian discounts, and new federal/state EV rebates that lower premiums added.
Table of Contents
- Why electric cars are now 12–28 % cheaper to insure
- Average EV insurance costs right now
- Companies that give the biggest EV discounts
- How much real EV owners are paying today
- Fastest ways to pay the absolute least on an EV
- Frequently Asked Questions (plain text)
Why electric cars are now 12–28 % cheaper to insure
In 2025 insurance companies finally love EVs: fewer moving parts, lower repair frequency, advanced safety tech, and almost no theft when Sentry Mode is on. The federal $7,500 tax credit also indirectly helps because many insurers now treat EVs as “safer and greener.”
Average EV insurance costs – December 2025
| Model / Situation | Typical yearly cost | Cheapest company right now | Typical yearly savings vs gas car |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tesla Model 3 / Model Y | $1,620 – $2,280 | Tesla Insurance / Geico | $400 – $1,200 |
| Rivian R1T / R1S | $1,980 – $2,680 | Progressive / State Farm | $500 – $1,400 |
| Ford F-150 Lightning / Mustang Mach-E | $1,780 – $2,420 | Geico / Travelers | $350 – $1,100 |
| Hyundai Ioniq 5 / Kia EV6 | $1,580 – $2,180 | Nationwide / USAA | $300 – $980 |
| Any EV + pay-per-mile | $980 – $1,680 | Metromile / Nationwide | $800 – $2,100 |
Companies that give the biggest EV discounts
- Tesla Insurance – cheapest for any Tesla (uses real-time driving data)
- Geico – up to 20 % explicit EV discount in 40+ states
- Progressive – Snapshot + EV bonus = up to 25 % off
- State Farm – Drive Safe & Save works great on electric cars
- Travelers & Nationwide – strong green-vehicle discounts
How much real EV owners are paying today
- Average Tesla Model Y: $1,720–$2,100/year
- Rivian R1T in California: $2,080–$2,480/year
- Ford F-150 Lightning nationwide: $1,880–$2,300/year
- Low-mileage EV + pay-per-mile: many pay under $1,400/year
- EV + home bundle: total savings often $1,600–$2,600/year
Fastest ways to pay the absolute least on an EV
- Use Tesla Insurance if you own a Tesla
- Bundle home + auto (EV discount stacks on top) → Bundle Home + Auto Guide
- Add pay-per-mile if you drive under 10,000 miles → Pay-Per-Mile Insurance 2025
- Take a defensive-driving course (still works on EVs)
- Keep a clean record – EVs drop even faster when you stay accident-free
- Non-owner EV insurance exists and is extremely cheap in many cities
Frequently Asked Questions (plain text)
Q: Is Tesla Insurance actually the cheapest in 2025? A: Yes – for almost every Tesla owner it beats Geico and Progressive by $200–$800/year.
Q: Do all insurance companies give an EV discount? A: Not all, but the major ones (Geico, Progressive, State Farm, Travelers) now do in 40+ states.
Q: Are Rivians expensive to insure? A: Higher than a Model Y, but still 10–20 % cheaper than a comparable gas truck.
Q: Can I combine pay-per-mile with an EV and save double? A: Yes – many remote workers with EVs pay under $90/month.
Q: Does the federal EV tax credit affect insurance rates? A: Indirectly – some states and companies give extra rebates or discounts because of it.
Drop your EV model and what you’re paying in the comments – we reply to every one!

