Auto Insurance in Nevada
Drivers in Nevada pay an average of $1,461 a year for auto insurance, a figure published by the NAIC for 2023. Your own rate is shaped by your vehicle, driving record, where you park it, and the coverage limits you choose, so no two Nevada policies look quite alike — comparing carriers is how you find the right fit.
Sourced figure — NAIC, 2023. Top local risk: wildfire & flood.
Nevada's dominant exposure is wildfire & flood, and that risk is a big reason auto insurance is priced and underwritten the way it is locally. Insurers weigh wildfire & flood history when they set rates and decide what to cover, so it is worth confirming your policy actually responds to it before you buy.
With roughly 3.2M residents, Nevada is a sizeable auto insurance market, and its wildfire & flood exposure is one of the factors insurers weigh when pricing coverage here. Premiums and availability vary widely by carrier, so confirm current requirements with the Nevada Department of Insurance before you rely on them.
Coverage that matters here.
Liability
Pays for injuries and property damage you cause to others in an at-fault accident, up to your policy limits.
Collision
Covers repairs to your vehicle after a collision with another car or object, regardless of fault.
Comprehensive
Pays for non-collision losses including theft, weather damage, fire, and animal strikes.
Uninsured motorist
Protects you when an at-fault driver carries no insurance or insufficient coverage to pay your damages.
Medical payments
Covers medical expenses for you and passengers after an accident, regardless of who was at fault.
What a policy responds to.
Auto Insurance by city in Nevada.
Other insurance in Nevada.
Compare every line for Nevada, or see the full Nevada insurance hub.
Auto Insurance in Nevada, answered.
How much is auto insurance in Nevada?
According to the NAIC, the average auto insurance expenditure in Nevada was $1,461 in 2023. Your actual rate depends on your vehicle, driving record, coverage limits, and insurer.
What is the minimum auto insurance required by law?
Every state except New Hampshire requires some level of liability insurance. Minimums vary widely by state but are often too low to fully cover a serious accident. Carrying limits above the state minimum protects your assets if damages exceed what the policy pays.
Should I carry collision and comprehensive on an older car?
Compare the annual premium for collision and comprehensive against the vehicle's actual cash value minus your deductible. If the payout you could receive is close to or less than what you pay in premiums, dropping those coverages may make financial sense.
What does gap insurance cover?
Gap insurance pays the difference between what your insurer pays after a total loss and what you still owe on the car loan or lease. It is most useful when you finance or lease a new vehicle that depreciates quickly in the first year or two.