Rate Comparison: Beaumont vs Nearby Cities (2026)
| City | Province | Monthly | Annual | Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Leduc | AB | CA$142 | CA$1,700 | CA$20 more |
| St. Albert lowest | AB | CA$140 | CA$1,680 | Same |
| Edmonton highest | AB | CA$152 | CA$1,820 | CA$140 more |
| Beaumont (this city) | AB | CA$140 | CA$1,680 | 7% below prov avg |
| Alberta Provincial Avg | CA$150 | CA$1,800 | Baseline | |
Beaumont sits below the Alberta provincial average, ranking it among the more affordable markets in the province. The most affordable nearby option in this comparison is Leduc at CA$1,700/year.
Risk Profile: Beaumont
Low-Moderate RiskAlberta carriers use local traffic data, theft statistics, weather exposure, and collision frequency to calculate your Beaumont rate. Knowing your city's risk profile helps identify which coverage elements are driving your premium and which comparison strategies are most effective.
Top Discount Strategies for Beaumont
Multi-Vehicle Bundle
Two or more vehicles with the same carrier simultaneously
Home & Auto Bundle
Largest single available discount for homeowners and condo owners
Low Annual Mileage
Beaumont residents with primarily local driving; Edmonton commuters should track mileage accurately
Multi-Vehicle Bundle
Beaumont households with two or more vehicles at same carrier
Mandatory Coverage in Alberta
Alberta requires drivers to carry Third-Party Liability and Accident Benefits at minimum. The province operates a private insurance system regulated by the Alberta Insurance Council (AIC).
| Coverage | What It Covers |
|---|---|
| Third-Party Liability | Pays others for injury or property damage; minimum CA$200,000 in Alberta |
| Accident Benefits | Covers medical, rehabilitation, and income replacement benefits for you and your passengers regardless of fault |
| Standard Accident Benefits | Includes additional injury and disability benefits under Alberta's standard benefit schedule |
| SEF 44 (Family Protection Endorsement) | Recommended endorsement protecting against under-insured or uninsured at-fault drivers |
2026 Reform Update — Alberta
Alberta's 2024 premium cap of 7.5% per annual renewal period limits carrier increases but does not prevent increases entirely. The provincial government has committed to a no-fault system transition by 2027 — a move that will significantly change how injury claims are compensated and how rates are calculated. Drivers seeking competitive rates should comparison shop before the transition takes full effect.