This Pay-Per-Mile Plan Could Save You $768 a Year on Car Insurance

Metromile
JAK SIE MASZ under Creative Commons
Some of the links in this post are from our sponsors. We provide you with accurate, reliable information. Learn more about how we make money and select our advertising partners.

How much do you actually drive every month? Do you have a lengthy commute to work each day? Or do you work from home or take public transit?

If you have your own car, but aren’t a frequent driver, pay-per-mile car insurance could help you save hundreds of dollars each year.

The Federal Highway Administration says an average driver puts in 13,476 miles per year but according to TechCrunch, 70% of drivers cover fewer than 10,000 miles per year. Why not pay just for the miles you drive?

That’s the idea behind Metromile, a car insurance company that charges people only for the driving they actually do each month. “If you’re driving under 5,000 miles per year, you will save 40% to 50%,” the company’s CEO, Dan Preston, told TechCrunch.

Is “Pay-Per-Mile” Insurance New?

While many insurance companies offer low-mileage discounts, Metromile is the only company offering “pay-per-mile” insurance. Another company, MileMeter, offered a similar pay-per-mile model, but closed its doors in 2012.

However, other companies offer programs that may help reduce your rates in exchange for monitoring your mileage and driving patterns. Progressive’s Snapshot and Allstate’s Drive Wise both allow you to install a device in your car that tracks your mileage and driving habits, including braking patterns and driving aggressiveness, to help determine your rates.

A Great Deal for Urban Drivers

Metromile is aimed mostly at urban drivers who have a car but don’t use it all that often. With parking fees, tolls and traffic, many city dwellers’ cars stay parked far more often than they’re driven. This service charges you a low base rate for the days your car sits in your driveway, garage or parking space, unused, and then just a few cents per mile you drive.

Right now, the service is only available in California, Oregon, Washington, Virginia, Illinois, New Jersey and Pennsylvania. However, the company hopes to expand to other markets in the near future.

How Much Does It Cost?

You install a device in your car’s on-board diagnostic port to log your mileage, and this number, along with your age, vehicle, credit report, where you live, insurance history and your driving record, helps the company determine your rates.

Each month, you pay a fixed base rate as well as a per-mile rate. Most people will pay a different amount each month, but the base rate and per-mile rate should stay the same for six months unless you request a reevaluation.

NerdWallet wrote that one 29-year-old San Francisco woman would pay around $57 per month with Metromile, as opposed to $121 through Geico (which was the cheapest traditional auto insurance provider they could find).

What’s the Catch?

If you’re a low-mileage driver, there really isn’t a catch. The company offers full coverage options and multiple different levels of liability coverage. Your car can be registered in any state, but the car must “reside permanently” at the location you list on your policy.

You can get Metromile if you own or lease your car, and it doesn’t matter if the car is paid in full or financed. If you don’t drive at all in a month, you’ll still pay the base rate for that month, but you won’t pay any “per-mileage” charges.

Do Road Trips Count?

Your per-day mileage charges are capped at 250 miles (150 miles in New Jersey). That means if you head out on a long road trip, you’ll pay the 250 miles (150 for New Jersey) for that day, but then you can drive for hundreds more miles on that calendar day without accruing any additional charges.

Kristen Pope is a freelance writer and editor in Jackson Hole, Wyoming.