Rates updated March 2026Based on state insurance filingsOur methodology โ†’
Cartrier
CJ
Chris Jensen ยท Licensed Insurance Agent
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Sarah Rodriguez ยท Reviewed by Data Analyst
Fact-checkedUpdated March 2026

Car Insurance with Bad Credit in Alaska: What You'll Actually Pay (2026)

Quick Answer

Drivers with poor credit in Alaska pay roughly $215/month for full coverage โ€” that's 45% more than the $149/month that good-credit drivers pay.USAA offers the lowest rate at $159/month.

โœ“ Updated March 2026โœ“ Based on state insurance filings

Cheapest Companies for Bad Credit Drivers in Alaska

USAACheapest
Monthly
$159/mo
Annual
$1,912/yr
Best for: Military families
Erie Insurance
Monthly
$170/mo
Annual
$2,041/yr
Best for: Rate lock guarantee
GEICO
Monthly
$177/mo
Annual
$2,119/yr
Best for: Clean driving record
Progressive
Monthly
$189/mo
Annual
$2,274/yr
Best for: Telematics savings
State Farm
Monthly
$196/mo
Annual
$2,351/yr
Best for: Good students
Travelers
Monthly
$205/mo
Annual
$2,455/yr
Best for: Multiple discounts
Nationwide
Monthly
$224/mo
Annual
$2,687/yr
Best for: Bundling home + auto
Farmers
Monthly
$233/mo
Annual
$2,791/yr
Best for: Signal telematics
Allstate
Monthly
$241/mo
Annual
$2,894/yr
Best for: Accident forgiveness
Liberty Mutual
Monthly
$254/mo
Annual
$3,049/yr
Best for: New car replacement

Rates for drivers with credit score below 580, 2020 Toyota Camry, full coverage in Alaska. Updated March 2026.

Monthly Full Coverage โ€” Visual Comparison

USAA
$159/mo
Cheapest
Erie Insurance
$170/mo
GEICO
$177/mo
Progressive
$189/mo
State Farm
$196/mo
Travelers
$205/mo
Nationwide
$224/mo
Farmers
$233/mo

These are estimates based on state averages. Your exact rate depends on your specific profile.

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How Each Credit Tier Affects Your Rate

Most people don't realize how much their credit score swings insurance costs. In Alaska, the gap between excellent and poor credit is $95/month โ€” or $1,141/year for the exact same coverage on the same car.

Credit TierMonthly RateAnnual Ratevs. Good Credit
Excellent (750+)$120/mo$1,443/yrโˆ’$29/mo
Good (670โ€“749)$149/mo$1,782/yrBaseline
Fair (580โ€“669)$192/mo$2,299/yr+$43/mo
Poor (below 580)$215/mo$2,584/yr+$66/mo

One thing worth noting: insurers don't use your FICO score directly. They pull a separate "insurance score" that weighs payment history and outstanding debt more heavily. So your insurance rate might not move in perfect lockstep with your credit card score.

Good Credit vs. Bad Credit: The Real Cost Gap

Good Credit (670+)

$149/mo

$1,782/year

Poor Credit (below 580)

$215/mo

$2,584/year

$

Potential Savings: $67/month

That's what bad credit costs you in Alaska โ€” $802 extra per year. Improving from poor to good credit would save you that much.

Which Companies Go Easiest on Bad Credit?

Not every insurer penalizes bad credit the same way. Some companies are notoriously harsh (looking at you, Allstate), while others like USAA tend to be more forgiving. Here's how the top companies stack up for drivers with credit challenges in Alaska:

USAA

Cheapest

USAA charges bad-credit drivers in Alaska about $159/month for full coverage. That's a credit penalty of roughly $49/month compared to what good-credit drivers pay. USAA consistently offers the lowest rates, but membership is limited to military families and veterans.

Monthly: $159/moAnnual: $1,912/yrCredit penalty: +$49/mo

Erie Insurance

Erie Insurance charges bad-credit drivers in Alaska about $170/month for full coverage. That's a credit penalty of roughly $53/month compared to what good-credit drivers pay.

Monthly: $170/moAnnual: $2,041/yrCredit penalty: +$53/mo

GEICO

GEICO charges bad-credit drivers in Alaska about $177/month for full coverage. That's a credit penalty of roughly $55/month compared to what good-credit drivers pay. GEICO tends to weight driving history more than credit, which can work in your favor if you have a clean record despite poor credit.

Monthly: $177/moAnnual: $2,119/yrCredit penalty: +$55/mo

Progressive

Progressive charges bad-credit drivers in Alaska about $189/month for full coverage. That's a credit penalty of roughly $58/month compared to what good-credit drivers pay. Progressive is generally one of the more forgiving companies when it comes to credit. Their Name Your Price tool can also help find coverage that fits your budget.

Monthly: $189/moAnnual: $2,274/yrCredit penalty: +$58/mo

State Farm

State Farm charges bad-credit drivers in Alaska about $196/month for full coverage. That's a credit penalty of roughly $61/month compared to what good-credit drivers pay. State Farm is a solid middle-ground choice โ€” they consider credit but aren't as aggressive about it as some competitors.

Monthly: $196/moAnnual: $2,351/yrCredit penalty: +$61/mo

How to Actually Improve Your Credit Score

Improving your credit is probably the single most effective way to lower your insurance costs in Alaska โ€” it could save you $67/month or more. Here's what actually works:

Pay down credit card balances

Getting utilization below 30% can bump your score 20-40 points within one billing cycle. Below 10% is even better. This is usually the fastest lever you can pull.

Set up autopay for every bill

Payment history is roughly 35% of your score. Even one late payment can drop you 50-80 points and stick around for 7 years. Autopay eliminates the risk entirely.

Check your credit reports for errors

About 1 in 5 credit reports contain errors, according to the FTC. Dispute anything inaccurate at annualcreditreport.com โ€” corrections typically take 30 days and can result in significant score improvements.

Don't close old cards

Length of credit history matters. That old card you never use? Keep it open. It's helping your score by adding to your average account age and total available credit.

Avoid hard inquiries

Each application for new credit triggers a hard pull that can ding your score 5-10 points. If you're rate shopping for a car loan, do it within a 14-day window โ€” multiple pulls for the same loan type get counted as one.

Discounts That Can Offset the Credit Penalty

While you work on improving your credit, these discounts can chip away at your premium right now:

DiscountTypical SavingsHow It Works
Telematics / Safe Driving10โ€“30%Install an app that tracks your driving. If you brake gently and avoid late-night drives, you save.
Bundling (Auto + Renters)5โ€“15%Combine auto insurance with renters insurance from the same company.
Defensive Driving Course5โ€“10%Complete a state-approved course, usually 4-6 hours online. Savings last 2-3 years.
Pay-in-Full5โ€“9%Pay 6 or 12 months upfront instead of monthly. Avoids installment fees.
Low Mileage3โ€“10%Drive under 7,500 miles/year? Ask about low-mileage discounts.
Multi-Car10โ€“20%Insure 2+ vehicles on the same policy.

Stacking a telematics discount with bundling and pay-in-full can realistically save you 20-35%. That won't fully erase the bad-credit surcharge, but it makes a real dent โ€” especially while you're building your credit back up.

These are estimates based on state averages. Your exact rate depends on your specific profile.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How We Calculated These Rates

Driver profile: 30-year-old, clean driving record, single, 12,000 miles/year. Credit score varies by section (poor = below 580, good = 670-749).

Vehicle: 2020 Toyota Camry LE โ€” the industry-standard benchmark for rate comparisons.

Coverage: Full coverage with 50/100/25 liability limits, $1,000 comprehensive deductible, $1,000 collision deductible.

Data sources: State insurance commission filings, NAIC rate data, and Quadrant Information Services estimates. Credit multiplier of 1.45x is based on Alaska's average poor-to-good credit rate differential.

Last updated: March 2026

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