Bundling your home and auto insurance with the same company is one of the most consistently recommended money-saving moves in personal finance — and for good reason. Most major insurers offer discounts ranging from 10% to 25% on both policies when you insure multiple products with them. On average, drivers who bundle save around $300–$600 per year compared to holding separate policies with different companies. But bundling isn't always the best financial move, and understanding when it works and when it doesn't is key.
Industry data shows bundling discounts typically range from 10–25% on each policy. On a combined premium of $3,000 per year (home + auto), a 15% bundle discount saves $450 annually. Over five years, that's $2,250 in savings for simply consolidating your policies.
State Farm offers an average bundling discount of around 17% on home insurance and up to 12% on auto. Their sheer size and the range of products available mean bundling opportunities extend beyond home and auto to include life insurance and renters insurance.
Allstate advertises savings of up to 25% when bundling home and auto. Their QuickFoto Claim process and Drivewise program add value for bundled customers who want a streamlined digital experience.
Farmers offers a Multi-Policy Discount that can reduce auto premiums by up to 20% when bundled with a home policy. They also offer multi-line discounts when adding umbrella, life, or commercial coverage.
Progressive bundles through affiliated companies for homeowners insurance, offering discounts of up to 5% on auto — smaller than some competitors. However, their base auto rates are often competitive enough that even a smaller bundle discount results in a good overall deal.
Bundling produces the most savings when one insurer genuinely excels at both home and auto coverage in your state. But insurers have different competitive strengths by region and product line. A company with an outstanding home insurance rate in your area might have mediocre auto rates, meaning the bundle discount doesn't actually make the combined cost lower than getting each policy separately from its most competitive provider.
The only way to know for certain is to run the math: get separate best-in-class quotes for home and auto individually, then get bundled quotes from two or three companies, and compare the totals. Some consumers discover they can save more by keeping their policies separate than by bundling — particularly if they've found a highly specialized insurer for one type of coverage.
For renters, bundling renters insurance with auto coverage works the same way as a home bundle. Renters insurance is inexpensive on its own ($15–$30/month), and bundling it with auto insurance frequently adds a 5–15% auto discount.
An umbrella policy extends liability coverage beyond your home and auto limits. Most insurers require you to hold both your home and auto policies with them before they'll sell you an umbrella. Buying all three together often comes with multi-line discounts.
Many insurers that offer life insurance will apply a multi-policy discount when you add life coverage to an existing home and auto bundle. The savings on the life policy may be modest, but the consolidated billing and relationship can simplify insurance management.
Before you bundle, make sure you understand the claims implications. Some insurers treat a claim on one policy as a reason to raise rates on other bundled policies. If you file a large home insurance claim, it could trigger an auto rate increase at the same company. Keeping policies separate with different insurers can sometimes insulate you from this cross-policy rate impact.