Real Cost of Ownership

Insurance shocked me more than fuel – did that happen to anyone else with newer SUVs?

Insurance shocked me more than fuel – did that happen to anyone else with newer SUVs?

You budget for gas. You budget for payments. You maybe even budget for maintenance.

Then you get the insurance quote. And your eyes pop.

I thought I was alone. Then I started asking around.


"My payment went down. My insurance went up."

Car: 2023 Honda CR-V (replaced a 2015 sedan)

Old insurance: $980/year

New insurance: $1,840/year

"I expected maybe a $300 increase. Almost $900? For a Honda? The agent said 'newer SUVs are stolen more and cost more to repair.' I didn't believe her until I checked three other companies. Same story."

"The Telluride almost doubled my premium."

Car: 2022 Kia Telluride (replaced a 2018 sedan)

Old insurance: $1,100/year

New insurance: $2,050/year

 "No tickets. No accidents. Good credit. The agent literally said 'the Telluride is expensive to fix right now.' Parts shortages. Long repair times. Rental car coverage adds up. I still bought it. But I wish someone had warned me."

"I downgraded from an Audi to a Toyota. Insurance went up."

Car: 2024 Toyota Highlander (replaced a 2019 Audi Q5)

Old insurance: $1,450/year

New insurance: $1,680/year

 "I thought a mainstream brand would be cheaper to insure. Wrong. The Audi had better safety ratings and a lower theft rate. The Highlander is more common and gets into more accidents. Insurance is about statistics, not luxury."

"The roof glass on the EV killed me."

Cracked panoramic glass panel with repair estimate showing 4000 dollars plus

Car: 2023 Hyundai Ioniq 5

Old insurance (2018 Forester): $1,050/year

New insurance: $2,300/year

"The agent explained: the glass roof cracks easily, replacement is $4,000+, and body shops are backed up for months. Plus EVs are written off more often after minor damage because repair costs exceed value. I love the car. But the insurance hurts every six months."


Why newer SUVs are so expensive to insure

Insurers won't tell you this directly, but here's what's happening:

Factor

Why it raises your rate

Repair costs

New sensors, cameras, and bumpers mean a fender bender that cost 1,500 in 2018 now costs1,500in2018nowcosts4,500

Theft rates

Certain Hyundais and Kias (even newer ones) are still tagged with higher theft risk

Parts shortages

Post-COVID supply chain means longer rentals while waiting for parts

Safety tech calibration

A cracked windshield now needs camera recalibration – adds $300–500 to every glass claim

Bigger vehicles, bigger damage

SUVs cause more damage to other cars, so liability is higher


What you can actually do

Check insurance before you buy. Get VINs for 2–3 cars you're considering and run quotes.

Raise your deductible. Going from $500 to $1,000 can drop your premium 10–15%.

Ask about new car replacement gap. Some insurers offer it cheap. Others charge a lot.

Bundle with home/renters. Usually saves 10–20%.

Avoid certain models. Call your agent and ask: "Which SUVs are cheapest to insure right now?" They know the list.


The cheapest SUVs to insure (based on recent data)

Subaru Outback

Honda CR-V (non-hybrid, lower trims)

Ford Escape (base engine)

Mazda CX-5 (non-turbo)

The most expensive (relative to price)

Kia Telluride

Hyundai Palisade

Toyota Highlander (especially Hybrid)

Any EV with a glass roof

Last updated · 2026-05-26 09:12

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