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Utah Auto Insurance: Consequences of Not Adding Teen Drivers

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Published August 13th, 2025
Detected March 22nd, 2026
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Summary

Utah's Insurance Commissioner Jon Pike clarified that auto owners and drivers are required to have insurance, meaning teen drivers must be added to parents' policies. Failure to do so can result in the insurance company not covering accidents and potential fraud investigations by the state.

What changed

Utah Insurance Commissioner Jon Pike has clarified that under Utah law, both auto owners and drivers are required to maintain insurance coverage. This means parents must add teen drivers who have obtained a license to their auto insurance policies. The Utah Financial Responsibility of Motor Vehicle Owners and Operators Act mandates "security" (insurance) for both owners and operators of vehicles. Failing to add a teen driver may lead to the insurance company denying coverage for accidents caused by the teen, leaving the policyholder responsible for all damages, medical bills, and legal fees. Furthermore, insurance companies are required to report suspected fraud or misrepresentation to the Insurance Department, which can trigger an investigation by the state's fraud division, potentially leading to criminal charges.

For parents and guardians with licensed teen drivers in Utah, the immediate required action is to contact their auto insurance provider to add the teen driver to the policy. While teens with learner's permits do not have a legal insurance requirement, it is still advisable to inform the insurer, as this typically does not increase premiums. The primary implication of non-compliance is the risk of significant financial liability for any accidents involving the uninsured teen driver, as well as potential legal repercussions for misrepresentation or fraud.

What to do next

  1. Add licensed teen drivers to your auto insurance policy.
  2. Contact your insurance provider to confirm policy requirements for permit drivers.

Penalties

Potential for denial of coverage, personal liability for damages, and investigation for fraud which could lead to jail time.

Source document (simplified)

GET GEPHARDT

Find out the consequences of not adding your teen driver to your auto insurance policy

Aug 13, 2025, 10:44 PM

BY MATT GEPHARDT & SLOAN SCHRAGE

KSLTV.com

SALT LAKE CITY — The day your teen becomes old enough to drive is both exciting and terrifying for you and your wallet. Bankrate estimates the average 16-year-old driver in Utah adds $5,327 to their parents’ insurance premiums that first year.

Some parents curb that cost by not adding their kids to their policy, believing the State of Utah only requires the car to be insured, not the driver.

That’s not quite right, according to Utah’s Insurance Commissioner, Jon Pike.

“It’s really a combination of the two,” Pike said.

He said once your kid passes the driver’s test and gets a license, you must tell your insurance company.

What the law says

“Well, the law says that auto owners and drivers are required to have insurance,” Pike said. “They’re required to have security.”

Utah insurance commissioner Jon Pike explains to KSL’s Matt Gephardt some of the legal consequences parents can face if they don’t add their teen drivers to their insurance. (Stuart Johnson, KSL TV)

That law is spelled out in Utah’s Financial Responsibility of Motor Vehicle Owners and Operators Act. In it, it reads:

“Every resident owner of a motor vehicle shall maintain owner’s or operator’s security in effect at any time that the motor vehicle is operated on a highway or on a quasi-public road or parking area or registered within the state.”

An operator means anyone who is in “actual, physical control” of the car, i.e. your kid. And security means an insurance policy.

Your insurance probably requires it

The law aside, Pike said the odds are super strong that your insurance requires you to add your teen driver.

“If you want to transfer some of that risk to your insurance company, then you got to pay them to take some of that risk,” he said.

If you don’t, your insurance company might not cover an accident caused by your teen driver. Then, you’re on the hook for repairs, medical bills, legal fees, on and on. Plus, Pike said your insurance would be required to report you for misrepresentation.

“If an insurance company suspects there’s been fraud or misrepresentation, they’re required to report that to the Insurance Department,” he explained. “Our fraud division is then required to investigate the matter.”

The potential consequences of that include jailtime.

“I think it’s a really bad idea to not tell your insurance company you’ve got a teenage driver,” Pike said.

Permit drivers

For teens with a learner’s permit, it’s a bit different. Pike said there is no legal insurance requirement. Still, he said you should let your insurance know. You probably won’t have to pay a higher premium for a permit driver. Your insurer knows there’s an extra pair of eyeballs in the car with your teen.

KSL 5 TV Live

Meet the KSL Investigators

Mike Headrick, KSL
Investigative Reporter
Matt Gephardt, KSL
Investigative Reporter
Daniella Rivera,
KSL Investigative Reporter
Courtney Johns, KSL Investigative Reporter Sloan Schrage, Consumer Investigative Producer

Named provisions

What the law says Your insurance probably requires it Permit drivers

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
GP
Published
August 13th, 2025
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Employers Consumers
Industry sector
5241 Insurance
Activity scope
Auto Insurance
Threshold
Teen driver has obtained a license.
Geographic scope
US-UT US-UT

Taxonomy

Primary area
Insurance
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Consumer Protection Traffic Safety

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