Build the Insurance & Cyber Skills You Need to Advance Your Career

USAA Begins Offering Auto Insurance (1922–1924)

San Antonio, Texas — Founded by 25 U.S. Army officers Category: Rise of Auto Insurers (1920s–1930s)

Summary

In 1922, a group of 25 U.S. Army officers in San Antonio formed the United States Army Automobile Association, later renamed USAA, to solve a problem no commercial insurer wanted to touch: military officers were considered poor auto risks and were routinely denied coverage. What began as a small reciprocal exchange among officers grew into one of the most trusted and financially disciplined insurers in the country. USAA’s founding marks the moment when affinity‑based insurance—rooted in shared identity, discipline, and loyalty—became a powerful alternative to the mass‑market models emerging elsewhere.

Background / Context

In the early 1920s, military officers faced a unique challenge. They moved frequently, lived on bases, and were often stationed in remote or temporary housing. Traditional insurers saw them as unstable risks and either charged high premiums or refused to insure them at all. Yet officers were, in reality, exceptionally careful drivers: disciplined, trained, and accustomed to following rules.

The officers who founded USAA believed they could insure one another more fairly than the commercial market could. They adopted the reciprocal exchange structure—policyholders insuring one another, with an attorney‑in‑fact managing operations—mirroring the cooperative ethos of Farmers in the West but grounded in military culture rather than agriculture.

What Happened

Market Impact

Claims Impact

Regulatory Impact

Why It Mattered

USAA’s founding marks the moment when auto insurance became not just a product of geography or distribution, but of identity. While State Farm and Farmers built their franchises around rural drivers, and Allstate built its around urban consumers, USAA built its around a community defined by service, discipline, and shared values. It proved that a narrowly defined membership group could produce extraordinary underwriting results and unmatched customer loyalty.

More broadly, USAA demonstrated that insurance could be built on trust—trust in the member, trust in the institution, and trust in the shared culture that binds them. In an industry often driven by price and scale, USAA became the quiet counterexample: a company that grew not by expanding outward, but by deepening inward. Its success stands as one of the most enduring legacies of the auto‑first era.

Related Entries

 

Thanks for Visiting Us!
Would you mind answering 3 quick questions so we can better serve insurance professionals?

How useful have you found Insurance Designation Lookup to be as a way to explore insurance designation options?

Would anything make it more helpful to you or a colleague?

Would you recommend it to a colleague?