Profile Picture
  • All
  • Search
  • Images
  • Videos
  • Maps
  • News
  • Copilot
  • More
    • Shopping
    • Flights
    • Travel
  • Notebook
  • Top stories
  • Winter Games
  • Sports
  • U.S.
  • Local
  • World
  • Science
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Business
  • More
    Politics
Order byBest matchMost fresh
  • Any time
    • Past hour
    • Past 24 hours
    • Past 7 days
    • Past 30 days

State Farm, insurance dividends

Digest more
Top News
Overview
 · 1d
State Farm to issue $5 billion in auto insurance dividends — or about $100 per car
State Farm will issue $5 billion in auto insurance dividends to its customers this summer, with a one-time payment of about $100 per vehicle, the Bloomington, Illinois-based insurance giant announced ...

Continue reading

 · 2h · on MSN
State Farm announces refund for car insurance customers
ConsumerAffairs · 11h
State Farm sending $5 billion back to car insurance policyholders
 · 5h
State Farm announces record $5 billion dividend; drivers to receive about $100 per vehicle
State Farm announced Thursday that it will issue a one‑time dividend this summer to qualifying policyholders across more than 49 million State Farm Mutual auto vehicles.

Continue reading

 · 1d
State Farm to pay record $5 billion dividend to auto clients
KDFW · 5h
State Farm to issue $100 average refunds to car insurance customers: What to know
MarketWatch
2mon

Will Car Insurance Rates Go Down in 2024?

Our team looked at over 100 of the top auto insurance providers in the U.S., from national providers like USAA, Travelers, and State Farm to regional providers like Erie Insurance. 8,500 Data Points Analyzed To properly score each auto insurance provider ...
1d

Trump says migrants make car insurance more expensive. Is he right?

President Trump blamed migrants for high insurance costs during his State of the Union address. But the numbers tell a different story.
104.5 WOKV
1h

2026 insurance satisfaction survey: How Gen Z, Millennials, Gen X and Boomers compare

Insurance.com reports that Boomers value policy options, while Millennials excel in digital satisfaction. All generations are frustrated by rate increases.
  • Privacy
  • Terms