Just buy plane you want. Insurance cost isn't enough difference in cost to buy something you won't be happy with. .
This. Our total insurance bill is two full tanks of fuel at last year's prices. Not much of the percentage of total operating cost at all.
If you're sweating the insurance, the first "ugly" find during an inspection and subsequent repair will be a total budget buster. Just the annual inspection with no significant squawks or repairs will run the same price annually as the insurance does.
Add parts at today's prices (Cessna's new owners have announced that they will make sure the full cost of the parts including liability insurance will now be included in the parts prices), you're way way above the insurance cost per year. The days of cheap subsidized Cessna parts where you only paid what it cost to make them, are no longer. Textron is run the "GE way" now with mostly ex-GE execs making those decisions. There's no motivation to build brand loyalty anymore. They know they aren't going to sell a 1970's 172 or 182 driver a new one.
And with the announcement they've guaranteed it. If I ever decided to go whole hog into a new aircraft at new aircraft prices, Cessna would be nearly dead last on my shopping list. Old tech, management that isn't interested or even all that effective at supporting GA (Skycatcher is/was a disaster in the only GA market ripe for picking), no innovation. Even the G1000 system is starting to show its age and no clear upgrade path for the ADS-B mandate yet. Unless I missed the announcement.
Nope. Cessna wouldn't get my dollars. No way. I love flying them but they're a non-starter for purchase of a new aircraft. There's a lot better options for $250,000 or more.
By the way, as Cessna parts prices climb, one of two things will naturally happen... Insurance will go up, or a lot more aircraft will be totaled on paper and sold for salvage instead of repaired, for what used to be considered very minor damage. The place where this is really going to show up are retracts. There are now parts in the gear retraction systems of all the Cessna retracts that cost a tenth of the entire airframe price. Add in a little sheet metal work and you'll go over the magic number and total the airplane really really easily.
Anyone leasing back a Cessna RG at this point to a flight school of kids beating the hell out of the gear for a Commerical rating, is setting themselves up for a $20K+ repair bill. The saving grace may be third party parts suppliers. Kent can tell ya how much his club saved on their RG repair by not using Cessna parts.
But insurance is likely to go up a bit, however you slice it.