FICO's new driving score will assess a driver’s level of risk
FICO's new driving score will assess a driver’s level of risk · CNBC

Fair Isaac Corp. (NYSE: FICO) made its name giving people credit scores.

Now, the company known as FICO wants to rate your driving skills. It is developing algorithms along with eDriving, a provider of driver training, to assess a driver's level of risk. FICO will test its driver score on teens early next year and eventually plans to roll it out to all consumers.

People who use eDriving's Mentor smartphone app will be given a FICO Safe Driving Score and told how they could improve their skills. The app tracks drivers' acceleration, braking, cornering, speeding and how they engage with their training on the app.

"We are taking a Weight Watchers or FitBit approach. It's a little bit of gamification and a little bit of shamifcation," said Celia Stokes, eDriving's chief executive.

Roughly 400,000 novice drivers a year use eDriving training and could have their skills scored by FICO.

The FICO driving score will be separate from its well-known credit score. "They are complementary products," said Rachel Bell, a senior director at FICO.

Auto insurers use people's credit scores from FICO and other providers to help set their insurance rates. More than 95 percent of U.S. insurance companies use credit to set auto premiums in every state except California, Hawaii and Massachusetts, where the practice is prohibited.

Credit scores can have a significant impact on your auto insurance rates regardless of your driving record. The FICO score ranges from 300 to 850 and the average American has a credit score of 699.

If you have fair credit, defined by FICO as 650 to 699, you'll pay an average of 28 percent more for car insurance than a driver with excellent credit, which is a score of 750 or above, according to an analysis by InsuranceQuotes.

That figure is up from 24 percent in 2013 when InsuranceQuotes last studied the impact of credit scores on auto insurance rates.

"Your credit history is becoming more important to insurers," said Laura Adams, senior insurance analyst at InsuranceQuotes.

Insurers use your credit score to derive a credit-based insurance score to determine how likely you are to file a claim. Each insurer has a different formula. "It doesn't exist in a format that consumers can request from their insurers," Adams said.

So if you want to lower auto insurance rate, work to improve your credit score .

Having good credit is increasingly important to policyholders because auto insurance rates are rising at the fastest pace in nearly 13 years, according to the U.S. Consumer Price Index.