For families
Teen Driver Insurance That Won't Wreck Your Budget
Young drivers cost more to insure, but the right approach keeps it affordable. Here's how to add a teen and still save.
- Licensed in all 50 states
- No effect on credit score
- Free comparison
- 4.8/5 stars

Few milestones hit the family budget quite like adding a teen driver. Inexperience makes young drivers statistically riskier to insure, which is reflected in higher premiums. The good news: a handful of proven strategies can soften the impact considerably.
Add them to your policy, don't start a new one
A standalone teen policy is almost always more expensive than adding your teen to the household plan. Family policies unlock multi-driver and multi-car discounts that a solo policy can't match.
Discounts that make a real difference
- Good-student discount — strong grades often earn a meaningful break.
- Driver-training courses — completing an approved program can lower the rate.
- Telematics — usage-based programs reward safe, low-mileage driving.
- Assigning the right car — pairing your teen with a safe, modest vehicle costs less than a sportier one.
Choose coverage thoughtfully
Teens are more likely to be in an accident, so adequate liability limits matter. If your teen drives a newer car, full coverage protects your investment. Balance protection against budget with our cheap car insurance tips.
Re-shop as your teen gains experience
Rates fall as young drivers build a clean record and age into lower-risk brackets. Make a habit of comparing carriers at every renewal to capture those savings.
Frequently asked questions
In most cases, adding a teen to an existing family policy is far cheaper than a separate policy, thanks to multi-driver and multi-car discounts.
Compare teen driver quotes
Compare personalized quotes from top carriers in minutes — free and with no effect on your credit score.
- Licensed in all 50 states
- No effect on credit score
- Free comparison
- 4.8/5 stars