| State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. is changing the way it applies discounts to its policyholders' auto insurance
premiums. The nation's largest auto insurer plans to set discounts for
Medical Payments (MedPay) and Personal Injury Protection (PIP) based on
the injury history of each vehicle. State Farm calls the new plan the
"vehicle safety discount."
| Click to State Farm's best-rated vehicles
to see which 2001 models are rated lower-than-average for comprehensive
and collision coverages and will receive the full 40 percent discount
on MedPay or PIP coverages. |
Previously, State Farm gave auto insurance
discounts on MedPay or PIP coverage when a policyholder's vehicle
contained one or more air bags. That plan offered policyholders a 20
percent savings on MedPay and PIP if the vehicle had one air bag, and
30 percent for two air bags.
State Farm will delve into
its deep database of insurance claims information to find each
vehicle's injury history — meaning the severity and frequency of
injuries that drivers and passengers sustain in a specific vehicle
during a car crash. "We have used the real-life laboratory in which
millions of State Farm insured vehicles travel every day to determine
the vehicle safety discount," says Gary Grant, a vice president and
actuary at State Farm. Dave Hurst, a spokesperson for State Farm, says about
one-third of its policyholders will see a 14 percent decrease in their
MedPay or PIP coverage, while one-third will experience a 14 percent
increase. The other third will see no change in their MedPay or PIP
premiums. Hurst says MedPay and PIP coverages account for approximately
10 percent of the total cost of auto insurance.
State Farm's new discount plan ranges from 20 percent to 40 percent
savings on MedPay and PIP coverages. Many of the vehicles that will
receive the full 40 percent discount are heavier ones because they
protect their passengers better than smaller vehicles. "It's true that,
in general, larger vehicles will get larger discounts," says Hurst. However, Hurst says the new plan is not an effort to reward
people who drive larger vehicles, such as SUVs and pickups. "This is
not a discount about big cars vs. little cars," he says. In fact,
owners of several smaller vehicles — the BMW Z3, Ford Taurus station
wagon, and Saturn SW — will receive the full 40 percent discount on
MedPay or PIP.
| Click to State Farm's best-rated vehicles
to see which 2001 models are rated lower-than-average for comprehensive
and collision coverages and will receive the full 40 percent discount
on MedPay or PIP coverages. |
In
addition to unveiling the new MedPay and PIP discount plan, State Farm
has released its relative comprehensive and collision premium rankings
for 2001 models. Thirty-six new vehicle models received State Farm's
"best-rated" status because they qualify for the full 40 percent MedPay
or PIP discount and are also rated lower-than-average for comprehensive
and collision premiums.
State Farm charges 10 percent to
40 percent less than the standard rate for vehicles rated
lower-than-average. The company charges 10 percent to 40 percent more
than the standard rate for vehicles rated higher-than-average. Choose
the vehicle manufacturer from the table below to view its State Farm
rating.
| State Farm 2001 model premium ratings |
|
|
|
|