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California Uninsured and Underinsured Driver Statistics (2026 Guide)

Steven M. Sweat
★  QUICK ANSWER — California has an uninsured driver rate of 20.4%, ranking 8th highest in the nation according to the Insurance Research Council’s 2025 report on 2023 data. Nationally, 1 in 3 drivers (33.4%) is either uninsured or underinsured. If you are injured by an uninsured or underinsured driver in California, your own UM/UIM coverage — required to be offered under Insurance Code §11580.2 — is typically your primary recovery source.

Every day on California roads, millions of drivers share the freeway with motorists who carry no auto insurance at all — or far too little to pay for the injuries they cause. If one of those drivers hits you, the at-fault driver’s insurance company will not be writing you a check. There may not be one to write to. Understanding exactly how widespread this problem is — and what legal protections exist for California accident victims — is the purpose of this guide.

Steven M. Sweat has represented Los Angeles accident victims in uninsured and underinsured motorist cases for over 30 years. The statistics below reflect the most current verified data available and are intended to be cited directly by researchers, journalists, and accident victims navigating these claims.

1. California Uninsured Driver Statistics: Current Data

The most authoritative source on uninsured driver rates in the United States is the Insurance Research Council (IRC), which measures uninsured motorists by analyzing the ratio of UM insurance claims to bodily injury liability claims across major insurers. The most recent comprehensive report, published in 2025, covers data through 2023.

California’s Uninsured Driver Rate (2023)

20.4%  of California drivers carried no auto insurance in 2023.

That translates to roughly 1 in 5 drivers on California roads operating without any liability insurance coverage. California ranks 8th highest in the nation for uninsured drivers, according to the IRC’s 2025 report. (Source: Insurance Information Institute / Insurance Research Council, 2025)

National Uninsured Driver Trend (2017–2023)

YearNational Uninsured RateChange
201712.4%Baseline
201812.1%−0.3 pts
201911.6%−0.5 pts (pre-pandemic low)
202014.3%+2.7 pts (pandemic spike)
202114.6%+0.3 pts
202215.2%+0.6 pts
202315.4%+0.2 pts (7-year high)

Source: Insurance Research Council, Uninsured and Underinsured Motorists: 2017–2023 (2025). Published via Insurance Information Institute (iii.org).

Top 10 States by Uninsured Driver Rate (2023)

RankStateUninsured Rate (2023)
1Mississippi28.2%
2New Mexico24.1%
3Washington, D.C.23.1%
4Michigan22.3%
5Tennessee21.3%
6Missouri20.7%
7Florida20.6%
8California20.4%  ◄
9Colorado19.7%
10Washington19.1%

Source: Insurance Research Council / Insurance Information Institute, 2025.

For context, the best-performing states — Maine (5.7%), Utah (6.2%), and Idaho (6.4%) — have uninsured rates less than one-third of California’s. A California driver is roughly 3.5 times more likely to be hit by an uninsured motorist than a driver in Maine.

2. The Underinsured Problem: Worse Than the Numbers Suggest

The uninsured driver rate captures only part of the coverage gap problem. Even drivers who technically carry insurance may carry policies too small to pay for the injuries they cause — the underinsured driver problem.

The IRC’s 2025 report found that nationally, 1 in 6 drivers (18.0%) were underinsured in 2023. Combined with the 15.4% uninsured rate, 1 in 3 U.S. drivers (33.4%) was either uninsured or underinsured — a 10 percentage point increase from 2017.

Why Minimum Policy Limits Are Often Inadequate

Until January 1, 2025, California’s minimum liability insurance requirements had not changed since 1967. Under the old law, drivers could legally operate a vehicle with just $15,000 in bodily injury coverage per person — less than a single emergency room visit for a serious injury.

California Senate Bill 1107 (the Protect California Drivers Act), which took effect January 1, 2025, doubled the minimum per-person bodily injury limit to $30,000 and tripled the property damage minimum to $15,000. A further increase to $50,000/$100,000/$15,000 is scheduled for January 1, 2035.

Coverage TypePre-2025 Minimum (since 1967)2025 Minimum (SB 1107)2035 Minimum
Bodily Injury — per person$15,000$30,000$50,000
Bodily Injury — per accident$30,000$60,000$100,000
Property Damage$5,000$15,000$15,000

Source: California Vehicle Code §16056 as amended by SB 1107 (2022), effective January 1, 2025.

Even under the new SB 1107 minimums, a driver with a $30,000 per-person policy who causes a traumatic brain injury — which can produce lifetime care costs exceeding $1,000,000 — leaves the victim with a catastrophic coverage shortfall. The new minimums are an improvement; they are not a solution.

3. Why California’s Uninsured Rate Is So High

California’s elevated uninsured driver rate reflects several structural factors that compound over time:

  • Insurance affordability crisis. California has among the highest auto insurance premiums in the nation. A 2024 analysis found average full-coverage premiums exceeded $2,400 annually — up 45% in one year. Premium increases driven by wildfire risk, inflation, and insurer exits from the California market have pushed coverage out of reach for many lower-income drivers.
  • Large undocumented population. A significant portion of California’s undocumented residents drive without insurance because they are ineligible for standard policies in their circumstances, lack access to banking required for policy payments, or fear the consequences of contact with the DMV.
  • High vehicle registration costs. California’s vehicle registration fees are among the highest in the country. For lower-income households, registration and insurance together can exceed $3,000 annually — leading some drivers to prioritize registration (which requires proof of insurance) but lapse on renewals.
  • Urban density creates more exposure. More vehicles on the road means a higher absolute number of interactions with uninsured motorists, even if the percentage were lower than it is.
  • Post-pandemic behavioral shift. The IRC data shows uninsured rates spiked sharply in 2020 (to 14.3% nationally) and have not recovered. The economic disruption of the pandemic caused millions of Americans to drop coverage — many have not returned.

4. The Financial Impact on California Accident Victims

When an uninsured driver causes an accident in California, the financial consequences fall directly on the victim unless they have taken specific steps to protect themselves.

What Happens When an Uninsured Driver Hits You

The at-fault driver has no insurance company to pay your claim. Your options depend on what coverage you carry and whether the at-fault driver has personal assets worth pursuing.

  • If you carry UM/UIM coverage: Your own insurance company steps in and compensates you as if the at-fault driver had insurance up to your UM/UIM policy limits. This is by far the most reliable recovery pathway.
  • If you do not carry UM/UIM coverage: You can sue the at-fault driver personally. However, many uninsured drivers have no attachable assets — no real property, no significant savings. A judgment against an insolvent defendant is often uncollectable.
  • If the at-fault driver has minimum-limits insurance: Your UIM coverage bridges the gap between their policy limit and your actual damages, up to your own UIM policy limit.
  • In a hit-and-run accident: Your UM coverage applies to unidentified hit-and-run drivers. California Insurance Code §11580.2 requires UM coverage to treat unidentified fleeing drivers as uninsured motorists.
KEY STATISTIC: The IRC’s 2025 report found that the combined cost of uninsured and underinsured motorist claims exceeds $13 billion annually in paid premiums across the U.S. — a cost borne by insured drivers in the form of higher premiums. Every insured California driver is effectively subsidizing the risk created by the 20.4% who carry no coverage.

5. California UM/UIM Coverage: What the Law Requires

California Insurance Code §11580.2 requires every auto insurer to offer uninsured and underinsured motorist coverage to every policyholder. You may decline it in writing, but you cannot be denied the option to purchase it, and coverage must be offered at limits matching your liability coverage.

How UM and UIM Coverage Work in California

Coverage TypeWhen It AppliesWhat It Pays
Uninsured Motorist (UM)At-fault driver has zero insurance, or is an unidentified hit-and-run driverMedical bills, lost wages, pain and suffering — up to your UM policy limit
Underinsured Motorist (UIM)At-fault driver has insurance but limits are too low to cover your full damagesThe gap between the at-fault driver’s policy limit and your actual damages, up to your UIM limit
Uninsured Motorist Property Damage (UMPD)Uninsured driver damages your vehicleVehicle repair or replacement, subject to a mandatory $250 deductible under California law

For a detailed explanation of how UM and UIM claims are filed and what to do when your insurer disputes your claim, see our complete guide: Hit by an Uninsured Driver in Los Angeles? How California UM/UIM Coverage Protects You.

How Much UM/UIM Coverage Should You Carry?

Under SB 1107, California insurers must offer UM/UIM limits matching the new $30,000/$60,000 minimum. But for meaningful protection, most California personal injury attorneys recommend carrying significantly more:

  • $100,000/$300,000 minimum for UM/UIM if budget allows — this covers most moderate-injury cases without shortfall.
  • $250,000/$500,000 or higher if you have significant assets or earn a substantial income — UIM claims against your own insurer are capped at your policy limits.
  • Consider an umbrella policy with UM/UIM extension for maximum protection — umbrella policies can provide $1,000,000 or more in additional UM/UIM coverage at relatively low cost.

6. Recovering Compensation After an Uninsured Driver Accident

If you have been injured by an uninsured or underinsured driver in California, the steps you take immediately after the accident significantly affect your ability to recover full compensation.

Immediate Steps

  • Document the scene thoroughly. Photograph the other vehicle, license plate, driver’s license, and any damage. If the driver admits having no insurance, get that on video if possible.
  • File a police report. A police report is essential for UM/UIM claims, particularly hit-and-run cases. Many insurers require physical contact proof and a police report before a UM claim will be processed.
  • Seek immediate medical attention. Even if you feel uninjured. Adrenaline masks pain; symptoms of concussion and soft-tissue injury commonly present 24–72 hours later.
  • Notify your own insurer promptly. California auto policies typically require notice of a UM/UIM claim within 30 days. Review your policy for the specific deadline.
  • Do not give a recorded statement without an attorney. Even your own insurer — in a UM/UIM claim — has financial interests adverse to yours. Their adjuster is not on your side.

For a complete breakdown of California law governing uninsured driver accidents — including your rights under Insurance Code §11580.2, the arbitration process for UM/UIM disputes, and strategies for maximizing recovery — see:

→  California Law on Accidents Involving Uninsured Drivers

→  What Is Uninsured Motorist Coverage? UM/UIM Explained in CA

→  What Does Uninsured Motorist Insurance Cover in California?

→  Do I Need a Lawyer for My California Uninsured Motorist Claim?

→  Average Hit-and-Run Accident Settlement in California (2026 Guide)

7. UM/UIM and California’s Car Accident Crisis: The Broader Picture

California’s uninsured driver problem does not exist in isolation. It is part of a broader traffic safety and financial exposure crisis documented in detail in our California Car Accident Statistics 2026 Report. Key intersections between the two issues:

  • Fatality concentration in South LA and the Inland Empire. The areas of California with the highest uninsured driver rates overlap significantly with the corridors where fatal and serious-injury crashes are most concentrated — meaning victims in the most dangerous areas are also the least likely to be protected by the at-fault driver’s insurance.
  • Hit-and-run epidemic. California has one of the highest hit-and-run fatality rates in the nation. Many hit-and-run drivers flee precisely because they have no insurance. In these cases, UM coverage is the victim’s only source of recovery.
  • SB 1107’s uninsured motorist impact. Because SB 1107 also raised the minimum UM/UIM coverage limits that insurers must offer (matching the new liability minimums), any California auto policy issued or renewed after January 1, 2025 now provides a minimum of $30,000/$60,000 in UM/UIM protection — double the prior floor. This is meaningful improvement, but well below what a serious injury requires.

8. Frequently Asked Questions

What percentage of California drivers are uninsured?

According to the Insurance Research Council’s 2025 report (covering 2023 data), 20.4% of California drivers — approximately 1 in 5 — were uninsured. California ranks 8th highest in the nation for its uninsured driver rate.

What is the uninsured motorist rate in Los Angeles specifically?

Los Angeles has a structurally elevated uninsured driver problem compared to the California statewide average. The city’s dense urban corridors, high insurance costs, and large low-income population contribute to an estimated 1-in-6 or higher uninsured rate in LA specifically — consistent with the analysis in our dedicated guide on being hit by an uninsured driver in Los Angeles.

What happens if an uninsured driver hits me in California?

If you carry UM coverage, your own insurer pays your damages up to your policy limit. If you do not carry UM coverage, you can sue the at-fault driver personally, but recovery depends entirely on their personal assets — which are often minimal. See our Uninsured Motorist Attorney Los Angeles practice page for a full breakdown of your options.

Does UM coverage apply to hit-and-run accidents in California?

Yes. California Insurance Code §11580.2 extends UM coverage to unidentified hit-and-run drivers. However, most California policies require physical contact between vehicles and a filed police report as conditions of a UM hit-and-run claim. See our guide to hit-and-run accident settlements in California for the full process.

Is California required to offer uninsured motorist coverage?

Yes. Under Insurance Code §11580.2, California insurers must offer UM/UIM coverage with every auto policy at limits matching the policyholder’s liability coverage. You may reject it in writing, but it must be offered. As of January 1, 2025, SB 1107 raised the minimum UM/UIM limits that must be offered to $30,000/$60,000.

How has California’s uninsured driver rate changed over time?

California’s uninsured driver rate tracked the national trend: a pre-pandemic low in 2019, a sharp spike in 2020, and continued elevation through 2023. The rising cost of auto insurance premiums — California saw increases of 45–54% in 2023–2024 — has made it harder for lower-income drivers to maintain coverage, pushing rates upward.

What is the difference between uninsured and underinsured motorist coverage?

Uninsured motorist (UM) coverage applies when the at-fault driver has no insurance at all, or is a hit-and-run driver. Underinsured motorist (UIM) coverage applies when the at-fault driver has insurance, but their policy limits are too low to cover your full damages. Both are addressed in our detailed guide: What Is Uninsured Motorist Coverage? UM/UIM Explained in CA.

Injured by an Uninsured Driver in California? Contact Our Office.

If you or a family member has been injured in an accident involving an uninsured or underinsured driver anywhere in Los Angeles or Southern California, Steven M. Sweat, Personal Injury Lawyers, APC offers a free, confidential consultation. With more than 30 years handling UM/UIM claims in California, we know how to navigate insurer resistance, arbitration procedures, and coverage disputes to recover maximum compensation for our clients.

We handle all personal injury cases on a contingency fee basis — no fee unless we recover compensation for you.

Free Consultation: 866-966-5240  |  victimslawyer.com  |  Se Habla Español

Sources and Methodology

This article draws on the following primary sources:

  • Insurance Research Council. Uninsured and Underinsured Motorists: 2017–2023. Published 2025. Data reported via Insurance Information Institute (iii.org/fact-statistic/facts-statistics-uninsured-motorists).
  • California Senate Bill 1107 (Protect California Drivers Act, 2022), amending California Vehicle Code §16056, effective January 1, 2025.
  • California Insurance Code §11580.2 (mandatory UM/UIM offer requirement).
  • Insurance Information Institute. Facts + Statistics: Uninsured Motorists (2025). iii.org.
  • California Department of Insurance. Auto Insurance consumer guidance.
  • Steven M. Sweat, Personal Injury Lawyers, APC. 30+ years of California UM/UIM case experience.

All statistics are attributed to their primary source. This article will be reviewed and updated annually. Last updated: May 2026.

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