How to Compare Home and Auto Insurance Bundles
Comparing home and auto insurance bundles effectively requires more than scanning premium totals. To find the option that’s genuinely best for your situation, you need to evaluate coverage quality, insurer reliability, and total cost on an apples-to-apples basis. This guide walks through the process step by step.
Step 1: Don’t Compare Price Alone
The most common mistake when comparing insurance bundles is focusing exclusively on the premium. A lower premium with lower coverage limits or higher deductibles isn’t necessarily a better deal — it’s just less protection for less money. True comparison requires holding coverage terms constant.
Step 2: Inventory Your Current Coverage
Before requesting quotes, document your existing coverage: dwelling coverage limit, personal property limit, liability limit, and deductible for homeowners; bodily injury limits (per person/per accident), property damage, uninsured motorist, collision, comprehensive, and deductible for auto. These become your baseline. Request all new quotes at these same levels.
Step 3: Get At Least Three Bundle Quotes
Contact at least three major insurers for bundled quotes. Include a mix of direct insurers (State Farm, Allstate, Geico) and independent agent options (Erie, Travelers, Nationwide). Getting quotes through an independent insurance agent can also help you compare multiple companies at once.
Step 4: Also Get Separate Quotes
For a complete picture, also get the best separate home quote from one insurer and the best separate auto quote from another. Sum these to create a “best separate” total. If any bundled quote beats this total at identical coverage, the bundle delivers genuine savings.
Step 5: Evaluate Coverage Details
Beyond the premium, review: replacement cost vs. actual cash value for personal property (replacement cost is better), deductible amounts and how they affect out-of-pocket risk, coverage exclusions specific to your area (flood, earthquake, hurricane), and optional endorsements you may need.
Step 6: Ask These Questions of Each Insurer
- What is your NAIC complaint ratio for my state?
- What is your AM Best financial strength rating?
- How do you handle claims when both home and auto are affected by the same event?
- Is there a single deductible if a single event damages both home and vehicle?
- How long have you been offering coverage in my state?
Step 7: Check Independent Ratings
Price and coverage aside, insurer reliability matters. Review J.D. Power’s annual home and auto insurance satisfaction studies, each insurer’s AM Best rating (A- or higher is recommended), the NAIC’s complaint ratio database (available free at naic.org), and consumer review platforms for claims experience.
Step 8: Calculate Total Annual Cost
Add up the annual premiums for both policies under each bundle option. Include any fees. Compare this total against your best-separate-policies alternative. The difference is your true bundle savings (or cost).
Key Takeaways
- Compare bundles at identical coverage levels — never compare a lower-coverage bundle against a higher-coverage separate option.
- Always include a “best separate” quote in your comparison to understand the true value of the bundle discount.
- Review AM Best ratings and NAIC complaint ratios alongside premiums — insurer reliability matters.
- Ask specific questions about how multi-peril claims are handled when both home and auto are involved.
- Repeat this process annually — insurance markets change and your optimal choice may shift.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does it take to compare bundle quotes? Getting three to four quotes typically takes a few hours if done online, or one to two days if working through agents. It’s time well spent — annual savings can be significant.
Should I use an insurance broker? Independent brokers can compare multiple insurers at once and may surface options you wouldn’t find on your own. They’re particularly useful in complex situations or states with challenging markets.
What is the NAIC complaint ratio? The NAIC (National Association of Insurance Commissioners) complaint ratio measures how many complaints an insurer receives relative to its market share. A ratio below 1.0 means fewer complaints than the industry average — a positive sign.