Hagerty Celebrates 40 Years of Supporting the Collectible Car Community
Traverse City, Michigan — On April 3, 1984, in the basement of the family home in Traverse City, a small resort town on the shore of Lake Michigan, Frank and Louise Hagerty started a business to sell insurance policies to owners of classic and collector wooden boats.
Insurers at the time considered these elegant, highly polished boats to be too risky and too few to bother with, so the Hagertys—who loved to cruise the local inland lakes in a Chris-Craft named Pipe Dream—did what entrepreneurs have always done when they detect an unfilled niche.
They filled it.
But success with a startup is never certain. After setting up the business, placing a few small ads in wooden boat magazines, and connecting a single phone line to an answering machine, they hoped for the best. Their first stroke of good luck happened on a road trip to Florida. McKeel, the youngest of the three Hagerty children after Kim and Tammy and today the company’s CEO, went into a phone booth to check the answering machine and see if anyone had left a message. He heard nothing. Silence. He worried that no one had called, that no one wanted wooden boat insurance after all. Moments later, he realized the tape wasn’t empty, the silence was the tape rewinding to the beginning. Instead, message after message was of boaters wanting quotes, so the family turned the car around and headed back to Michigan.
They didn’t know it at the time, but that moment would be the start of something big—for the Hagerty family and for car collectors and fans everywhere.
Forty years later, Hagerty has become the hub of a community for millions of classic car lovers, a publicly traded company on the New York Stock Exchange (HGTY), and a leading automotive membership, media, and event company that in 2023 passed a billion dollars in annual revenue for the first time.
Today, Hagerty employs nearly 1,700 people worldwide, including about 500 in the Traverse City region, and insures more than 2.5 million vehicles. The company has an industry-leading Net Promoter Score of 82 (a gauge of customer loyalty for which the industry average is in the mid-40s) and partners with nine of the top 10 U.S. automotive insurers, including State Farm, the nation’s largest insurer of private passenger vehicles.
Let’s flip the calendar back to 1984 and look at some of the company’s milestones along the way.
Down in the Basement
Almost from day one, the business grew quickly, with Frank serving as the charming impresario and Louise as the operational glue that held things together. She was Hagerty’s first CEO.
“Dad had some amazing innovations that were baked into the business early on. He was an absolute visionary, not an operations person, though,” McKeel says today. “That was where my mom came in. She set up all the stuff that made Hagerty efficient and run well.”
But they were beginning to outgrow the basement, especially now that they had five employees in addition to Grandma Helen, who lived in the house at the time, and there was only one bathroom.
“We were just sort of figuring it out as we went,” Tammy Hagerty recalls. “I’m so proud that we’re still using a lot of those early concepts: the service level, the claims, Guaranteed Value, repair shop of choice. To this day, those differentiators are part of what makes Hagerty unique and successful.”
After five years in the basement, the agency made two major changes: First, it moved into a proper office building called Grandview Plaza near downtown Traverse City. Second and most important, Hagerty started offering insurance for classic and collector cars, writing its first auto policy in 1991. Much of this was driven by customer demand. “So many of our wooden boat customers who also had cars kept asking us to cover them,” Tammy recalls. So, the family almost inadvertently started a second business to insure collector cars. This “spin off” makes up the bulk of the business today. The core principles were the same, however. As Louise famously answered when asked why the business worked so well: “People take good care of their toys.”
“She was right—we exist as a company because of that line,” says McKeel. “Where there is passion for something and genuine care, there exists better insurance risk.”
Built for People Who Love Cars
When the business first began, it was a true family partnership. Everyone pitched in. Kim, Tammy, and McKeel all did their part in the early days. But it was a few years on before the second-generation siblings made their way back to Michigan full-time and the business started hiring key people. Tammy was the first to return. She and that initial team learned the core concepts from Frank and started selling, underwriting, and handling claims. It was an “all hands on deck” time. “We all learned so much. And we did it in real time,” Tammy recalls.
In 1995, Kim and McKeel returned home from lives they’d built on the west and east coasts, respectively. Eventually, Kim stepped into the CEO role while McKeel became president. Later on, Kim and McKeel shared the CEO role for a number of years until Kim became the company’s first board chairperson. Kim, who passed away in 2021, was known for her friendly spirit, infectious laugh, sharp legal advice, and 1957 Thunderbird—a head-turner around town due to its pink paint job. She is often credited with keeping the family values at the forefront of the business as it grew.
In 1997, the Hagertys realized the company would never grow by advertising insurance. “Insurance is boring,” says McKeel. Instead, Hagerty marketing efforts were imbued with a “twinkle in the eye” approach that focused on cars, not insurance. The response was enormous.
By the early 2000s, the company had grown enough that it started giving back to the collector car industry. Starting with the Hagerty Fund, launched in 2002, Hagerty has to date invested more than $22 million in preserving car culture. This includes the creation of a national nonprofit, the Hagerty Drivers Foundation (HDF), which financially supports institutions teaching the critical skills needed to keep every vehicle on the road. The Foundation also provides driver education grants to young drivers through its License to the Future program. In addition, the HDF has added 34 historic vehicles to the National Historic Vehicle Register, the only federally recognized program that documents and celebrates America’s most significant automobiles, preserving their heritage in perpetuity at the Library of Congress.
In 2018, to continue supporting the automotive community beyond insurance coverage, Hagerty began offering membership in Hagerty Drivers Club (HDC), which is the ultimate community for car lovers, offering exclusive discounts, roadside services, member experiences, and more. The club currently has more than 800,000 members.
Developing a passion-based community was always one of McKeel’s dreams. “Cars have a way of bringing people together,” he says. “Everything we do at Hagerty is to help people get the most out of the passion they have for cars and driving, and HDC is a big part of that.”
One of HDC’s most popular offerings is Hagerty Drivers Club magazine, which has become the nation’s largest print automotive magazine, featuring the work of the industry’s top automotive journalists. Similarly, Hagerty’s YouTube channel has become a massive hit, boasting more than 3 million subscribers.
Events, Auctions, and the New York Stock Exchange
In recent years, Hagerty has stewarded multiple high-profile, national events, such as The Amelia, Greenwich Concours, Motorlux (formerly McCall’s Motorworks Revival), a UK event called Festival of the Unexceptional, and RADwood, an ongoing series of events featuring ‘80s and ‘90s cars, music, and fashions that appeal to younger car collectors.
In December 2021, in perhaps the biggest moment in company history, Hagerty joined the New York Stock Exchange at a pro forma enterprise value of approximately $3.1 billion. At the time, McKeel said: “Today is a milestone for Hagerty and a testament to the talent and dedication of the entire Hagerty team and their commitment to our purpose of saving driving and car culture for future generations.”
In 2022, the company acquired Broad Arrow, which operates live and online collector car auctions. At its most recent two-day live auction at the 2024 Amelia, Broad Arrow sold more than $63 million worth of cars with a 92% sell-through rate. Among the top lots were a 1967 Ford GT40, at $4,405,000; and a 2022 Bugatti Chiron Pur Sport, at $4,047,500. In its first two years of operation, Broad Arrow tallied more than $180 million in transactions across auctions, private sales, and financing, establishing Hagerty as a major player in the live auction space.
To McKeel, auctions are a natural extension of the company’s long-standing efforts to provide in-depth valuation data and analysis of market trends to the collector community through Hagerty Valuation Tools, Hagerty Price Guide, and Hagerty Insider.
“We’ve often said the world didn’t need another auction company, but it did need a better one,” says McKeel. “Buyers and sellers trust Hagerty, and that’s extremely important in the online and live auction worlds.
“Just like with the insurance side of the business,” he continues, “we thrive by taking underserved industries and making them better for car lovers.”
Most recently, the company announced Keepers of the Flame, a year-long creative campaign and an ode to the passion that millions of people share for cars and driving. The campaign kicked off in late March 2024 with an exciting, emotional video, which is available here.
For McKeel, the campaign is one more way of honoring the car community.
“More than 67 million Americans self-describe as car enthusiasts,” said McKeel. “We exist for them. I take pride in knowing their passion for cars is as vibrant as it was 40 years ago, and that Hagerty is playing a vital role in maintaining this community of car lovers for the next 40 years.”
And it all started in a Northern Michigan basement.
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Congratulations on 40 years of phenomenal growth, Hagerty. The article and pictures are quite interesting and illustrative of how an American family, through creativeness and focused energies, can truly succeed even today. Oh, I do hope that some of those wooden boat pictures shown in the photos are still hanging on a Hagerty office wall somewhere, if not in McKeel’s den!
Congrats, and thanks for having some of the most pleasant people I’ve ever come across working for the company.
Cheers.
Congrats!
Please try to be more active in preserving our cars from future legislation and rule changes that we may be facing soon. No drive areas and lack of proper oils and gas we need to keep these models on the road.
No need for insurance if we can’t drive at dawn.
Totally agree! So much of the time of current legislatures today are spending valuable time and resources attempting to take away the simple activities that we so enjoy and have all worked so hard to preserve.
What does “dawn” have to do with things? I don’t understand…
There was (maybe still is?) a Hagerty-inspired event to encourage all members to take a simultaneous “Drive at Dawn” so that we could all do a cruise together, no matter where we are located. This used to happen on a specified day, and back when the forum allowed us to submit photos, pictures of members posing with their cars with the rising sun out on some country road were encouraged and submitted for a special article. I think it’s been curbed for a few years now, for whatever reasons, but I’m betting that’s what hyperv6 was referencing!
Congrats on your prototypical story of American success – frankly, there aren’t a lot of companies that I feel good about recommending to others, but Hagerty is an exception. Keep up the good work, and thank you all for your efforts !
Congratulations on your 40th anniversary and the best car magazine out there. I always read each issue cover to cover. My only complaint is that Mustang Club of America members in the USA get a 5% discount on insurance in the USA, but not here in Canada. Maybe this is something you can look into, otherwise, everything is going smoothly with being a customer.
What a great story and great company! This is a perfect way to kick off my early Spring garage weekend! Thank you.
Great article on a great company. CONGRATULATIONS!
Congratulations. Nice short story of the company.
Great story, never knew the history of Hagerty. Congratulation on 40 years.
Would it hurt for you to give credit to the Canadian insurer Lant insurance who have been doing what you do since the early 1970’s . Who you eventually bought out.
Yes , Lant they had a big part of Hagerty coming to Canada . Lant & Silver Wheels . Please keep Hagerty alive in Canada for another 40 years.
Yes I started with Lant and the silver wheels programme 30 years ago with a 1966 Mustang which I recently sold. there has been a lot of changes since then but I still have one vehicle with Hagerty.
Congratulations and thank you! Hagerty makes it possible for me to enjoy cruising in my 65 Mustang convertible at a reasonable price while providing me the peace of mind to make it enjoyable. I feel good recommending Hagerty to my friends. You have created a much needed resource for the collector car market and it is much appreciated.
Congratulations on your 40th anniversary! My experience with Hagerty has been exceptional, including two claims experiences over the years. It has been an absolute pleasure, dealing with your Hagerty staff. I have several cars insured with your organization and they’ll remain with Hagerty as far as I’m concerned.
Really enjoyed reading the story. A typical American success story which amplifies what people can do with a dream, guts, an idea, perseverance, smarts, and hard work can do. I tip my hat to you all. Keep it going.
I have been with Haggerty for over 20 years and think they are great to deal with and the sales reps are always pleasant ,i am dedicated costumer .. Perth Ontario Canada
Congratulations and best wishes toward your future endeavors.