Auto Insurance Minimums Doubled

In 2025, one of the most important changes for anyone hurt in a Santa Monica crash isn’t a new court decision or a city ordinance—it’s the quiet but massive jump in California’s minimum auto insurance limits. For people injured in car, pedestrian, bicycle, or rideshare collisions, this change can mean the difference between an insurance policy that barely touches the bills and one that actually covers a meaningful part of the harm.

At Cohen Injury Law Group in Santa Monica, we’re already seeing how this statewide change affects local cases, negotiations, and settlement strategy. This article breaks down what changed, why it matters, and what you should do if you’re hurt in a collision in 2025 or later.

Auto Insurance Minimums Doubled

What Changed: California’s Auto Insurance Minimums in 2025

For decades, California drivers only had to carry $15,000 / $30,000 / $5,000 in liability insurance:

  • $15,000 for injury or death to one person

  • $30,000 total for injury or death to more than one person

  • $5,000 for property damage

Those numbers were badly outdated in a world where a single ER visit can run several thousand dollars.

Under SB 1107, for accidents that happen on or after January 1, 2025, the new minimums are:

  • $30,000 for injury or death to one person

  • $60,000 total for injury or death to more than one person

  • $15,000 for property damage

That’s double the bodily injury coverage per person and per collision, and triple the minimum property damage coverage.

A few key details:

  • The date of the accident matters.

    • A crash in 2024 usually uses the old minimums (15/30/5).

    • A crash in 2025 or later uses the new minimums (30/60/15), assuming the at-fault driver only carried the legal minimum.

  • This is a statewide change, so it applies to every collision in Santa Monica, from Ocean Avenue to Pico, whether the crash involves locals, tourists, or rideshare drivers using California policies.

Why This Matters So Much in Santa Monica

Santa Monica is dense, walkable, and busy. We have:

  • Tourists unfamiliar with local streets

  • Heavy traffic on the 10, Pacific Coast Highway, Lincoln, and Wilshire

  • Cyclists, scooter riders, and pedestrians everywhere

When collisions happen here, injuries often include:

  • Fractures, torn ligaments, and herniated discs

  • Concussions and more serious brain injuries

  • Spinal injuries and nerve damage

  • Surgeries, injections, and long-term physical therapy

It’s common for medical bills, lost wages, and future treatment needs to far exceed the old $15,000 per-person limit. That meant many people in serious crashes were fighting over an insurance policy that simply didn’t match the real cost of the harm.

With the new $30,000 / $60,000 bodily injury limits, there’s more money to work with:

  • A single injured person now has up to $30,000 from the at-fault driver’s minimum policy (instead of $15,000).

  • If multiple people are hurt, there is $60,000 total to divide (instead of $30,000).

This doesn’t magically make serious cases “fully covered,” but it often:

  • Prevents extremely low policy-limit settlements in moderate cases

  • Gives more room to negotiate a result that covers more of your medical bills and lost wages

  • Makes some cases economically viable to litigate that previously would have been capped too low

Example: How the New Minimums Change Real Cases

To see the practical difference, consider two similar crashes on Santa Monica Boulevard.

Scenario 1: Crash in 2024

  • One injured person with $25,000 in medical bills and $10,000 in lost wages.

  • At-fault driver carries minimum 15/30/5.

  • No other coverage is available.

No matter how strong the case, the maximum you can get from that driver’s policy is $15,000. That doesn’t even pay off the medical bills, let alone lost wages or pain and suffering. We can still pursue other avenues, but the primary policy is badly underpowered.

Scenario 2: Crash in 2025

Same injuries, same bills, same facts—but the crash happens on January 2, 2025, and the driver now has the new minimum policy.

  • At-fault driver carries 30/60/15.

  • Now there is up to $30,000 available for that one injured person.

Is $30,000 enough to make someone truly whole in that situation? Probably not. But it’s double the prior minimum, which can:

  • Pay more of the medical bills

  • Leave more room to negotiate reductions on liens

  • Leave more compensation available to address pain, suffering, and future care

For someone trying to pay rent in Santa Monica, keep up with treatment, and recover physically and financially, that difference is very real.

The Limits of Higher Minimums

Even with the new law, minimum coverage is still not “good coverage.”

In serious injuries—such as those from a high-speed crash on PCH, a pedestrian hit in a crosswalk, or a cyclist thrown by a turning vehicle—medical bills can easily:

  • Exceed $50,000–$100,000 in emergency and follow-up care

  • Lead to months or years of lost wages

  • Require ongoing treatment, surgery, or lifetime care

In those cases, even $30,000 per person may still be a fraction of the true loss.

That’s why, at Cohen Injury Law Group, we don’t stop at the at-fault driver’s minimum policy. We look for every potential source of coverage, which can include:

  • Higher liability limits if the at-fault driver bought more than the minimum

  • Employer policies, if the at-fault driver was on the job

  • Rideshare coverage (Uber, Lyft), which may add a much larger policy depending on the stage of the ride

  • Commercial vehicle policies if the case involves delivery vans, work trucks, or company cars

  • Your own policy, including:

    • Uninsured/Underinsured Motorist (UM/UIM) coverage

    • Medical Payments (MedPay) coverage

The 2025 minimums give us a better starting point, but serious injury cases still require a thorough investigation and a comprehensive strategy.

How Insurance Companies Respond to the 2025 Changes

Insurance companies are not charities. As minimum limits increase, carriers:

  • Adjust premiums

  • Tighten how they evaluate claims

  • Look for ways to reduce payouts, even when the policy technically has more money available

In real terms, that can look like:

  • Early lowball offers designed to cut off your claim before the full impact of your injuries is clear

  • Requests for recorded statements that are later used against you

  • Arguments that your injuries are “pre-existing” or less serious than your doctors say

  • Attempts to blame you, even when fault appears straightforward

The fact that the policy now carries a $30,000 or $60,000 limit doesn’t mean the carrier suddenly wants to pay that amount. It just means there is more coverage to fight over.

In Santa Monica, where cost of living is high and many people can’t afford to miss work for long, these dynamics are especially important. An adjuster’s quick offer might sound tempting when bills are piling up—but accepting it too early can lock you into a settlement that doesn’t reflect the real value of your case.

What You Should Do After a Santa Monica Crash in 2025

If you’re hurt in a collision in or around Santa Monica, the steps you take—especially under these new insurance rules—can affect how much of that increased coverage you actually receive.

1. Get Medical Care Right Away

Even if you feel “okay” at the scene, symptoms of serious injuries often show up later, including:

  • Neck and back injuries

  • Concussions and brain injuries

  • Internal injuries

Prompt medical care:

  • Protects your health

  • Creates a clear record linking your injuries to the crash

  • Makes it harder for the insurance company to argue that your injuries came from somewhere else

2. Gather Evidence If You Can

If you’re able (or a passenger or friend can help):

  • Take photos of the vehicles, scene, debris, skid marks, and your injuries

  • Get names and contact information for witnesses

  • Note any cameras nearby—businesses, traffic cameras, or residential doorbell cameras

This evidence can matter even more now that there is more money on the table, because it strengthens your position when the insurance company tries to minimize fault.

3. Don’t Guess About Insurance

People often assume:

  • “The other driver only has minimum coverage.”

  • “My own insurance won’t help because I wasn’t at fault.”

Both assumptions can be wrong. We routinely find:

  • More coverage than clients knew existed

  • UM/UIM policies they forgot they had

  • Additional policies from employers or commercial entities

In a 2025 case, we want to know not just that there is a $30,000 minimum, but whether there are layers of coverage beyond it.

4. Talk to a Lawyer Before Dealing with the Insurance Company Alone

The adjuster might sound friendly. Their job is still to pay as little as possible. Before you:

  • Give a recorded statement

  • Sign a release

  • Accept a settlement offer

It’s wise to talk with a Santa Monica personal injury lawyer who understands how the 2025 changes affect real case value. Once you settle, you can’t go back for more if your injuries turn out worse than you thought.

How Cohen Injury Law Group Uses the New Law to Help Accident Victims

At Cohen Injury Law Group, we don’t just recite the new minimums. We build them into every part of our case strategy.

Thorough Policy Investigation

We start by:

  • Obtaining and reviewing the at-fault driver’s policy

  • Confirming whether they only have the minimum, or higher limits

  • Investigating whether any employer, rideshare, or commercial policies are involved

  • Reviewing your own policy for UM/UIM and MedPay coverage

In a world where the minimum is now 30/60/15, accurately identifying all coverage sources is even more critical. It’s not enough to assume “minimum only” and stop there.

Case Valuation That Reflects 2025 Realities

We consider the full scope of your harm, including:

  • Past and future medical care

  • Lost wages and lost earning capacity

  • The effect on your daily life, relationships, and activities

  • Long-term pain, limitations, and emotional distress

Then we compare that with the available coverage. The higher minimums mean that in some cases, policy limits are no longer the ceiling they once were. That can change:

  • Whether it makes sense to push for a policy-limit demand

  • Whether the case should be positioned for litigation

  • How we approach negotiation with multiple injured parties in the same crash

Standing Between You and the Insurance Companies

We handle:

  • Communications with adjusters

  • Gathering medical records and bills

  • Working with doctors and experts when necessary

  • Negotiating with health insurers and lienholders

Our goal is straightforward: to use the increased coverage and every available policy to get you the strongest possible result, while you focus on healing.

What This Means If You Already Have a Santa Monica Case

If you were injured in a crash before January 1, 2025, your case likely involves the old minimums, which creates a different strategy and set of challenges.

If your crash happened on or after January 1, 2025, and:

  • The at-fault driver is a California driver, and

  • They carried only the minimum legal coverage,

then these new limits should apply.

For people who don’t know the date of their crash off the top of their head, or aren’t sure what coverage applies, that’s exactly the kind of situation we walk through in a consultation. The difference between a 2024 and 2025 accident in terms of available minimum coverage can be substantial.

Protecting Yourself Before Anything Happens: Your Own Coverage

One final point many people in Santa Monica overlook: your own policy matters just as much as the other driver’s.

Even with the new 30/60/15 minimums, there are still many situations where the at-fault driver’s coverage won’t come close to the real cost of a serious injury. That’s why we encourage people to look at their policies and consider:

  • Higher liability limits (to protect your own assets if you ever cause a crash)

  • Uninsured/Underinsured Motorist (UM/UIM) coverage at the same level as your liability coverage

  • MedPay coverage to help with medical bills regardless of fault

We see too many people who are hurt by drivers with low coverage, only to discover they also bought minimal protection for themselves. In a city where traffic is heavy and serious injuries are common, upgrading your own policy is one of the smartest moves you can make.

Talk to Cohen Injury Law Group About a 2025 Santa Monica Car Accident

The 2025 change to California’s minimum auto insurance limits is good news for injured people—but only if that coverage is properly identified, documented, and pursued.

If you were hurt in a car, motorcycle, bicycle, pedestrian, or rideshare crash in Santa Monica:

  • You may have access to more insurance money than someone in the same situation just a few years ago.

  • Insurance companies will still work hard to pay as little as possible.

  • The date of the crash, the policies involved, and the way your claim is handled all matter more than ever.

Cohen Injury Law Group is based in Santa Monica and focused on personal injury cases across the Westside and greater Los Angeles. We investigate coverage, build strong claims, and negotiate with the knowledge that minimum policies are no longer stuck at outdated 15/30/5 limits.

If you have questions about a 2025 collision—or if you’re unsure what insurance applies in your situation—reach out to us for a consultation. We can review the facts, explain how the new law affects your case, and help you decide on the next step that best protects your health, your rights, and your financial future.