
Bundling home and auto insurance has been a go-to money-saving strategy for years. But with insurance rates climbing across the board in 2026, you might be wondering: does bundling still make sense?
The short answer: it depends.
The longer answer involves comparing actual quotes, understanding what you're really getting, and knowing when bundling works in your favor, and when it doesn't.
Let's break it down.
What Is Insurance Bundling?
Bundling means purchasing multiple insurance policies from the same company. The most common combination is home and auto insurance, but you can also bundle renters insurance, life insurance, umbrella policies, and more.
Insurance companies reward you for consolidating your policies with them. The reward? A multi-policy discount.
Simple concept. But the execution requires some homework.
The Numbers: How Much Can You Actually Save?
Most major insurers offer bundling discounts ranging from 10% to 25%. Some advertise savings up to 40%.
Here are a few examples from 2026:
- State Farm: Up to $1,356 per year in savings
- American Family: Up to 40% off when bundling
- Nationwide: Up to 15% discount

These numbers look attractive. But here's the catch: the discount percentage varies based on your location, your coverage needs, and the company's base rates.
A 25% discount from a company with high base rates might still cost more than no discount from a company with lower rates.
That's why comparing actual dollar amounts matters more than chasing percentages.
Benefits Beyond the Discount
Bundling isn't just about saving money. There are practical advantages that make managing your insurance easier.
1. Convenience
One company. One bill. One renewal date. One customer service number to call.
If you've ever juggled policies from three different insurers with three different renewal cycles, you know the value of simplicity.
2. Streamlined Claims Process
Picture this: a severe storm damages your roof and totals your car in the driveway. With bundled coverage, one company handles both claims.
Some insurers even apply a single deductible when one event damages multiple covered items. That's real money back in your pocket.
3. Better Retention
Having multiple policies with one insurer can work in your favor when things go wrong.
Got a fender bender? Filed a small claim? Companies are sometimes less likely to drop customers who hold multiple policies. You're more valuable to them as a bundled customer.

When Bundling Might NOT Be Worth It
Here's where things get interesting.
Bundling doesn't automatically guarantee the lowest price. In some cases, buying separate policies from different insurers costs less overall.
Real Example
Let's say Company A offers you:
- 2% discount on auto insurance
- 12% discount on homeowners insurance
- Total savings: 14%
Meanwhile, Company B offers the cheapest auto policy in your area, and Company C has the best homeowners rate. Combined, those separate policies save you 17% compared to Company A's bundle.
The bundle loses.
This scenario plays out more often than you'd think, especially in states with competitive insurance markets.
Other Situations Where Bundling Falls Short
- You have a poor driving record: Some insurers penalize high-risk drivers heavily, even with bundling discounts
- Your home is in a high-risk area: Flood zones, wildfire regions, and tornado-prone areas can skew rates dramatically
- You qualify for other discounts: Sometimes loyalty discounts, professional organization memberships, or safe driver programs from separate companies beat bundling savings

How to Decide: A Simple Framework
Follow these steps to determine if bundling makes sense for your situation.
Step 1: Get Bundled Quotes
Request quotes from at least three major insurers for both home and auto coverage bundled together. Note the total annual premium for each.
Step 2: Get Separate Quotes
Now request quotes for home insurance only from multiple companies. Do the same for auto insurance only.
Find the cheapest home policy and the cheapest auto policy. Add them together.
Step 3: Compare Totals
Which number is lower, the bundled quote or the combined separate quotes?
That's your answer.
Step 4: Factor in Convenience
If the difference is minimal (say, $50-100 per year), the convenience of bundling might be worth paying slightly more.
If the difference is significant ($300+ per year), separate policies probably make more sense.
Questions to Ask Your Insurance Agent
Before making a decision, get clarity on these points:
- What's the exact dollar amount I'll save by bundling? (Not just the percentage)
- Are there any other discounts I qualify for?
- What happens to my discount if I cancel one policy but keep the other?
- Do you offer a single deductible for claims involving both my home and car?
- How does my claims history affect my bundling discount?
An independent agent can shop multiple carriers on your behalf. That's often the fastest way to compare bundled vs. separate options.
The Bottom Line for 2026
Bundling home and auto insurance remains a solid strategy for many Ohio households. The discounts are real. The convenience is real.
But it's not a universal win.
Insurance companies set their own base rates. A discount on an expensive policy can still cost more than full price from a cheaper competitor.
The only way to know for sure? Compare actual quotes. Every time you renew.
Insurance markets shift. Your situation changes. What worked last year might not be the best deal this year.
👑 60-Second Summary
Everybody, I am the King of Coverage.
Here's the deal with bundling in 2026:
Most insurers offer 10-25% off when you bundle home and auto. Some go up to 40%. Sounds great, right?
But that discount is based on their rates: not necessarily the lowest rates available.
Sometimes buying home insurance from Company A and auto insurance from Company B saves you more than bundling with Company C.
The fix? Compare bundled quotes against separate quotes. Look at actual dollar amounts, not just percentages.
Bundling also gives you convenience: one bill, one company, simpler claims.
But if separate policies save you $300+ per year? Take the savings.
Need help comparing? That's what we're here for at Cook Insurance Group.
Stay safe, stay informed, and stay insured.