11/04/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 11/04/2024 14:03
Inadequate pricing for violations and accidents accounts for $4.7 billion in annual premium leakage for personal auto insurers.1 Against a backdrop of ongoing riskier driving behaviors,2 a new Verisk study reveals an unsettling storyline-but new data sources and innovations are enabling insurers to confront these challenges.
"As American roads have grown more deadly, [experts] blame...a breakdown in the social contract - the basic expectation that drivers will follow the rules…"
A recent Verisk study finds police are issuing almost 20% fewer traffic violations compared with pre-pandemic levels, yet extreme incidents are up 7.9% over the same period-2023 versus 2019.3
(Traffic incidents extrapolated to national totals)
The trend of police issuing fewer violations has had a large impact on insurers' bottom lines. Beyond the profitability pressures for insurers, there is a fairness issue of safe drivers having to pay more than their share to cover the losses of riskier drivers-and the impacts to society in terms of lives lost and futures shattered.
"As American roads have grown more deadly, [experts] blame...a breakdown in the social contract-the basic expectation that drivers will follow the rules," says an article in The New York Times that explores the complex reasons behind the dramatic drop-off in police enforcement of traffic violations.
Assessing driving risk is among the costliest aspects of auto insurance underwriting. Even as violations decrease, state motor vehicle report (MVR) fees continue to rise. A new Verisk analysis finds the national average MVR fee has risen to $11.16, an increase of nearly 28% over the past decade.4
In 2024 alone, MVR fees increased in six states:
The most recent changes bring the number of states that charge $20 or more for MVRs to six, with 14 charging $15 or more.
Given the premium leakage, profitability, and safety implications, it's imperative for auto insurers to track driving risk cost-effectively. Verisk's Driving History Solutions provide insurers with comprehensive capabilities across the policy life cycle. These tools deliver the most current driving history data on violations and incidents for lead segmentation, initial quoting, mid-term adjustments, and renewals. Cost-saving indicators can support these functions while minimizing unnecessary MVR orders.
The key to MVR expense reduction lies in our unmatched, multisource Public Records IntelligenceTM database with more than 2 billion public records on driver risk, including more than 10,000 connections to traffic courts, more than 300 million crash records, and more than 65 million nontraffic criminal offense records.
Amid ongoing pressure to cut costs, expense optimization continues to be top of mind for many carriers. A suite of tools-providing comprehensive, detailed data with solutions that help maximize information while optimizing cost-improves both accuracy and efficiency.
These are examples of information public records can enable insurers to identify:
Leveraging court record analytics and data from various public sources, insurers can gain faster risk insights that deliver value across the policy life cycle. These include lead qualification, violation prefill, risk segmentation, optimized MVR ordering, planning future underwriting actions based on incidents not yet adjudicated, and more.
Boost profitability while avoiding premium leakage trade-offs, and save up to 35% with dynamic, integrated solutions that optimize ROI.
Put Verisk to the test. Contact your account executive to schedule a proof-of-concept test or explore our Driving History Solutions.