Trends in Auto Thefts Add to Rising Claim Costs

January 22, 2024

Vehicle theft rates continue to put pressure on the personal auto insurance market.

CCC Intelligent Solutions said in its year-end report that the number of vehicle thefts in the U.S. increased 2% in the first half of 2023 after rising 7% in 2022.

Total losses as a result of thefts peaked at 4% of total losses in the fourth quarter of 2022 and have exceeded 3% of total losses since the fourth quarter of 2001, CCC said. Total losses from theft were less than 2% of total losses in 2018 and 2019, according to the report.

CCC’s report called out automobile thefts as “a concerning trend.”

The report says thefts accounted for about 3% of total loss value in the third quarter of 2023, but varied by type of vehicles. For domestic pickups, thefts accounted for 6% of total losses, but for pickups built in Asia, thefts were the cause of only 3% of losses.

Thefts of Asian and European-built cars also were lower: The percentage of total losses was 3.5% for domestic cars but about 3.2% for Asian cars and about 2.4% for European, according to the report.

CCC said while 85% of stolen cars were recovered, the vandalism needed to break into those vehicles was also a cause of loss. Repairable claims volume for vandalism was up 22% year-over-year in 2022 and was on pace to increase another 10% in 2023.

Thefts of catalytic converters also drove claims. Citing data from the National Insurance Crime Bureau, the report said there were 64,701 catalytic converter thefts in 2022, four times as many as in 2020.

CCC said its data shows that more than 70% of catalytic converter thefts were from cars seven or more years old. The average repairable catalytic converter claim had an average total cost of $1,415.

Topics Trends Auto Fraud

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