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The cost of the average car insurance policy last month was 20.3% higher than a year before, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. It’s the highest one-year increase in insurance costs since 1976, according to Bloomberg.

The average 6-month policy started in December cost Americans $780.28.

Auto insurance showed a higher increase than any other element of the Consumer Price Index – the government’s primary measure of inflation. The index showed overall inflation of 3.4% over the same period.

Car insurance rates differ wildly by state, as state laws control liability in accidents.

Read: These are the cars that cost the most and least to insure

Soaring repair costs

Soaring repair costs are the single largest factor driving insurance inflation. A New York Times analysis in July found that the average cost to repair a car after an accident has soared 36% in just five years.

Today’s increasingly high-tech cars often have expensive sensors in vulnerable places. The radar and lidar sensors that govern a smart cruise control system, for instance, need to sit on the exterior of a car to work properly. That leaves them susceptible to damage in even low-speed accidents.

Even a simple windshield replacement can now be a $1,000-plus repair thanks to embedded sensors and built-in lenses for traffic-scanning cameras.

Also see: The 9 things that are most likely to affect your auto insurance rates

Climate-driven disasters also a factor

A Washington Post analysis in September found that climate-related weather events also play a role.

Hurricane-prone Florida is the ultimate example. At least one prominent insurer — Farmers Insurance — recently elected to abandon the state entirely.

Also see: Lawmakers probe insurance crisis as premiums skyrocket

EVs cost more to repair

Electric vehicles are a small but growing percentage of the cars on American roads. Kelley Blue Book parent company Cox Automotive reports that 7.6% of the new cars Americans bought last year were electric – up from 5.8% in 2022 and 3.2% in 2021.

EVs can be more expensive to repair than gas-powered cars. The problem is particularly acute with Tesla
TSLA,
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products. Some studies have shown that other brands’ EVs are only marginally more expensive to repair than gas-powered cars, but Teslas are so costly to fix that insurers often write off even lightly damaged models.

High repair costs reportedly contributed to Hertz’s
HTZ,
-4.12%
recent decision to divest much of its Tesla fleet.

Read more: Is buying a used Tesla from Hertz a good deal? Here’s what you should know.

The company has responded by launching its own insurance. But an insurance pool made up entirely of expensive-to-repair cars has its own problems.

This story originally ran on KBB.com.

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