Home / Car insurance cost / Alaska
Alaska · 2026

Car insurance in Alaska is cheaper than most states.

The average driver here pays $1,262/year — 12% below the national average, and higher than 23 of 50 other states.

$1,262
avg full coverage
per year
All 51 states by costYou're here ↓
$926 · Maine$1,994 · Florida
● Alaska is in the 45th percentile nationally
See your own number
Start with your ZIP — takes 10 seconds, no signup.
Your estimate
$1,262 /yr
Alaska average · full coverage · clean record
Compare real quotes →

What affects your rate in Alaska

Alaska's average premium is 12% below the national average of $1,438, ranking #28 of 51 states by cost. NAIC cautions that state-to-state comparisons reflect differing coverage mixes, urban density and required coverages, not just carrier pricing.

How Alaska compares

Average full-coverage premium per year
BenchmarkPer year
Alaska$1,262
National average$1,438
Most expensive — Florida$1,994
Cheapest — Maine$926

Source: NAIC 2022/2023 Auto Insurance Database Report (combined average premium per insured vehicle, 2023 data, released February 2026).

Frequently asked questions

How much does car insurance cost in Alaska?

The average driver in Alaska pays about $1,262 per year — roughly $105 a month — for full-coverage car insurance, according to the NAIC 2023 Auto Insurance Database Report. State-minimum coverage typically costs much less.

Is car insurance more expensive in Alaska than the U.S. average?

No. At $1,262 per year, Alaska is about 12% below the national average of $1,438. That ranks it 28th out of 51 states and D.C. by cost.

Why is car insurance cheaper in Alaska?

Alaska's average premium is 12% below the national average of $1,438, ranking #28 of 51 states by cost. NAIC cautions that state-to-state comparisons reflect differing coverage mixes, urban density and required coverages, not just carrier pricing.

Does Alaska use your credit score to set car insurance rates?

Yes. Like most states, Alaska lets insurers use credit-based insurance scores, so a stronger credit tier can lower your rate. Only four states (California, Hawaii, Massachusetts, Michigan) ban it.

How can I lower my car insurance in Alaska?

Compare quotes from several insurers, raise your deductible, bundle auto with home or renters, and keep a clean driving record. For the same driver, premiums in Alaska can differ by hundreds of dollars between companies, so shopping around is the biggest lever.

About this estimate. The base figure is the NAIC combined average premium for Alaska (liability + collision + comprehensive, 2023). The calculator applies published industry multipliers (age, credit, record, coverage) from secondary sources (Bankrate / ValuePenguin modeled rates) and is an estimate for informational purposes only — not an insurance quote or offer. Credit-tier adjustments are not applied in states that ban credit-based insurance scoring (California, Hawaii, Massachusetts, Michigan). See our full methodology.