"My priority as Insurance Commissioner is to protect all California consumers, and these regulations ensure that auto insurance rates are based on factors within a driver's control, rather than personal characteristics over which drivers have no control," Jones said.
According to a report by the car insurance search engine The Zebra, the gap in price between men and women hasn't been huge -- the national average is around 1 percent -- and typically it's seen men pay more. That trend reversed itself in 2017, and now we see women in most states paying a higher premium.
"Gender is one of many factors people consider unfair to be used in pricing car insurance rates because it doesn't have to do with how someone drives," said Alyssa Connolly, Director of Market Insights for The Zebra, in a statement. "California is already one of a handful of states that have prohibited the use of similar nondriving factors like credit, level of education or whether someone owns or rents their home."
So while removing gender as a factor in car insurance pricing is pretty far from something like equal pay for equal work, it's still a step in the right direction.