Indiana Auto Insurance Rates Report – Real 2024–2025 Policies

Indiana Auto Insurance
Rates & Coverage Report

Real policy data from our Indiana clients across Johnson, Delaware, Miami, and Floyd counties — covering Indianapolis suburbs, Muncie, Peru, and New Albany. See actual rates and what drives pricing across Indiana’s diverse geography.

Data: 7 policies • 4 Indiana counties • 2024–2025


Indiana Summary

This Indiana report is drawn from 7 sold policies across 4 counties during 2024–2025 — a balanced mix of full coverage, auto liability, and one non-owners policy through Progressive and Dairyland. Indiana is part of our growing Midwest presence, with clients concentrated in Johnson County (Indianapolis southern suburbs), Delaware County (Muncie), Miami County (Peru), and Floyd County (New Albany, across the Ohio River from Louisville).

The average monthly premium is $161.01, but this is heavily influenced by Johnson County’s three identical full coverage policies at $243.56/month. The more practical range for Indiana drivers is illustrated by Floyd County’s $36.57 liability-only policy at the low end and Johnson County’s full coverage at the high end — a 566% spread that’s almost entirely explained by coverage type rather than geographic risk difference.

Indiana is a tort (at-fault) state with relatively low minimum liability requirements, making it one of the more affordable Midwestern states for basic liability coverage. However, Indiana also has a notably high uninsured motorist rate — estimated at 15–16% of drivers — which makes UM/UIM coverage an important consideration even if it’s not mandatory.

Carrier Distribution

Policies by Insurance Company
Insurance CompanyPoliciesShare
Progressive571.4%
Dairyland228.6%
Progressive leads for full coverage and standard liability. Dairyland handles Delaware County’s non-standard profiles — including the non-owners policy in our dataset.
Coverage Type Mix
A balanced Indiana mix — full coverage, liability, and non-owners each represented. Johnson County’s full coverage policies at $243.56 drive the dataset average upward significantly.

Indiana Snapshot

Average Monthly Premium
$161.01
All 7 policies
Median Monthly Premium
$149.80
Middle of the distribution
Lowest Observed Rate
$36.57
Floyd County — liability only
Highest Observed Rate
$243.56
Johnson County — full coverage
⚡ Johnson County Full Coverage: $243.56/mo

Three identical full coverage policies in Johnson County (Greenwood/Whiteland area south of Indianapolis) at exactly $243.56 — suggesting consistent risk profiles on the same or similar vehicles. This is the dataset’s anchor point for what full coverage looks like in Indianapolis’ suburban ring.

📍 Floyd County Low End: $36.57/mo

New Albany (Floyd County) sits directly across the Ohio River from Louisville, KY. The $36.57 liability policy is among the lowest in our entire multi-state dataset — likely a clean-record driver seeking minimum compliance coverage in a moderate-density border city.

Key Takeaways
  • Johnson County (Greenwood area): 3 identical full coverage policies at $243.56 — Indianapolis suburban ring, most data depth in the dataset.
  • Delaware County (Muncie): 2 policies at $60.67–$149.80 (avg $105.24) — mid-sized city in East Central Indiana, Ball State University town, moderate risk environment.
  • Miami County (Peru): Single policy at $149.33 — rural north-central Indiana, single standard liability profile.
  • Floyd County (New Albany): $36.57 liability-only — Indiana’s lowest-premium observation, Louisville metro cross-river commuter community.
  • Indiana’s uninsured driver rate: ~16% — among the higher rates in the Midwest. Adding UM/UIM coverage is worth the modest extra cost.

County Pricing

Average Monthly Premium by County
Johnson County’s average is anchored by 3 full coverage policies. Coverage type is the primary driver of differences across all 4 counties.
County Table
CountyPoliciesAvg / MonthLowHigh
Johnson County3$243.56$243.56$243.56
Miami County1$149.33$149.33$149.33
Delaware County2$105.24$60.67$149.80
Floyd County1$36.57$36.57$36.57
Get a quote calibrated to your specific county, vehicle, and coverage level — especially if your situation involves violations, an SR-22 requirement, or a financed vehicle requiring full coverage.

Indiana Insurance Context

Indiana Minimum Coverage Requirements

Indiana requires 25/50/25 liability minimums: $25,000 per person bodily injury, $50,000 per accident, and $25,000 property damage. Indiana is a tort (at-fault) state with no mandatory PIP. Uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage is offered with every policy and can be rejected in writing — given Indiana’s ~16% UM rate, accepting at least minimum UM coverage is advisable.

SR-22 in Indiana

  • Required after OWI (Indiana’s term for DUI), certain serious violations, uninsured accidents, or license suspension
  • Indiana typically requires SR-22 for 3 years
  • Non-owners SR-22 available for drivers without a registered vehicle
  • Both Progressive and Dairyland handle Indiana SR-22 filings electronically

Indianapolis Suburbs vs. Rural Indiana

Johnson County (our highest-premium county) is a fast-growing Indianapolis suburb — Greenwood and Whiteland are part of the metro’s southern commuter ring. Suburban Indianapolis rates run higher than rural Indiana due to traffic volume, higher vehicle theft rates, and more costly accidents on busy surface streets and I-65/I-74 corridors. Floyd County (New Albany) benefits from being a smaller city adjacent to Louisville’s Kentucky rates, which tends to keep cross-river Indiana communities moderately priced. Delaware County (Muncie) and Miami County (Peru) represent the mid-tier — smaller cities with less congestion but fewer carrier options than metro markets.

Indiana’s High Uninsured Motorist Rate

Indiana consistently ranks among the top 10 states for uninsured drivers — approximately 1 in 6 Indiana drivers carries no insurance. This creates real financial exposure for insured drivers who get hit by an uninsured motorist. Adding UM/UIM coverage at 25/50 or 50/100 typically costs $10–$25/month and provides significant protection that Indiana’s minimum liability mandate does not require carriers to offer proactively.

Frequently Asked Questions — Indiana Auto Insurance

What does auto insurance cost in Indiana based on real policy data?

From our 7 sold policies across 4 Indiana counties during 2024–2025, the average monthly premium is $161.01 with a median of $149.80. Individual policies ranged from $36.57 (Floyd County, New Albany — liability only) to $243.56 (Johnson County, Greenwood area — full coverage). Johnson County accounts for our strongest data concentration with 3 identical full coverage policies at $243.56, reflecting consistent risk profiles in Indianapolis’s southern suburban ring. Delaware County (Muncie) showed a more moderate range of $60.67–$149.80 across 2 policies. The $161 dataset average is pulled upward by the Johnson County full coverage policies — for liability-only or non-owners coverage, expect significantly lower premiums, as Floyd County’s $36.57 illustrates.

Indiana has a high uninsured driver rate — should I add UM coverage?

Indiana’s uninsured motorist rate is approximately 15–16% — placing it among the higher-UM states in the Midwest and making uninsured motorist coverage a genuinely important consideration. Indiana does not mandate UM/UIM coverage, so it can be rejected in writing, but given that roughly 1 in 6 Indiana drivers carries no insurance, the risk of being hit by an uninsured driver is real and statistically significant. Adding UM/UIM coverage at 25/50 typically costs $10–$25 per month on an Indiana policy — relatively modest protection against a common exposure. If you’re involved in a hit-and-run or struck by an uninsured driver and you’ve waived UM coverage, your liability-only policy provides no compensation for your injuries or vehicle damage beyond what collision coverage (if you have it) addresses.

What are Indiana’s minimum auto insurance requirements?

Indiana requires 25/50/25 liability coverage: $25,000 per person for bodily injury, $50,000 per accident, and $25,000 for property damage. Indiana is a tort (at-fault) state with no mandatory PIP. Uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage is offered with every policy but can be waived in writing. Indiana’s minimums are typical for the Midwest — identical to Ohio’s and Missouri’s. One nuance worth noting: Indiana’s minimum property damage threshold of $25,000 may be insufficient for accidents involving newer vehicles, where repair or replacement costs frequently exceed that amount. Consider carrying 50/100/50 or higher if your assets warrant it.

How does SR-22 work in Indiana, and what is an OWI?

Indiana calls its impaired driving offense an OWI (Operating While Intoxicated) — the same charge that most states call DUI or DWI. An OWI conviction, along with reckless driving, driving uninsured, or certain license suspension events, triggers Indiana’s SR-22 requirement. The standard SR-22 period in Indiana is 3 years from the date of license reinstatement. Both Progressive and Dairyland — the two carriers in our Indiana dataset — handle Indiana SR-22 filings electronically with the Indiana Bureau of Motor Vehicles (BMV). Non-owners SR-22 is available for drivers who need compliance coverage without owning a vehicle. Any coverage lapse during the SR-22 period is reported immediately to the BMV and can result in license re-suspension.

Is auto insurance more expensive in Indianapolis suburbs than in the rest of Indiana?

Yes — our data reflects this clearly. Johnson County (Greenwood/Whiteland, Indianapolis’s southern suburban ring) showed 3 full coverage policies at $243.56/month — the highest county average in our Indiana dataset. By contrast, Floyd County (New Albany, across the Ohio River from Louisville, Kentucky) showed a $36.57 liability-only policy — the lowest individual premium in our entire Indiana book. The difference between these two counties illustrates how much coverage type and suburban vs. smaller-city geography affects pricing. Indianapolis-area counties see more congestion on I-65, I-74, and SR-135 corridors, higher vehicle theft rates, and costlier accidents than smaller cities like Muncie (Delaware County, averaging $105.24 in our data) or rural Indiana communities.

Which carriers does A Plus Insurance use for Indiana policies?

Our 7 Indiana policies run through two carriers: Progressive (5 policies, 71%) and Dairyland (2 policies, 29%). Progressive handles the majority of our Indiana book including full coverage and standard liability profiles. Dairyland specializes in Indiana’s non-standard segment — including the non-owners policy in our dataset, which is Dairyland’s core strength in compliance-focused markets. Both carriers file Indiana SR-22 electronically with the BMV and are competitive for OWI-related filings. For most Indiana drivers seeking standard coverage, Progressive is typically the most competitive option; for higher-risk or non-owners situations, Dairyland is worth quoting alongside Progressive to find the best fit.
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Jayleen Ridgeway - Marketing Manager

Jayleen Ridgeway

Marketing Manager| 9 Years of Digital and Marketing Strategy

Data-driven marketing strategist specializing in insurance rate analysis, pricing trends, and consumer insights derived from real-world first-party data. With a background in SaaS technology, Jayleen leads all marketing and social media efforts while uncovering actionable trends from monthly, quarterly, and yearly insurance data.
Last Updated on by Jayleen Ridgeway

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