Vehicle (Car/Auto) Insurance
Vehicle insurance (also known as auto
insurance, gap
insurance,
car insurance,
or motor insurance)
is insurance purchased
for cars, trucks, motorcycles, and other road vehicles.
Its primary use is to provide financial protection against
physical damage and/or bodily injury resulting from traffic
collisions and against liability that could also arise therefrom. The specific
terms of vehicle insurance vary with legal regulations in each region.
Coverage levels
Vehicle insurance can cover some or all of the following
items:
- The insured party (medical
payments)
- The insured vehicle (physical
damage)
- Third parties (car and people, property damage and
bodily injury)
- Third party, fire and theft
- In some jurisdictions coverage for injuries to
persons riding in the insured vehicle is available without regard to fault in the auto accident (No Fault
Auto Insurance)
Different policies specify the circumstances under which each
item is covered. For example, a vehicle can be insured against theft, fire damage, or accident damage
independently.
Excess
An excess payment, also known as
a deductible, is a fixed
contribution that must be paid each time a car is repaired with the charges billed to an automotive insurance
policy. Normally this payment is made directly to the accident repair "garage" (the term "garage" refers to
an establishment where vehicles are serviced and repaired) when the owner collects the car. If one's car is
declared to be a "write off" (or
"totaled"), then the insurance
company will deduct the excess agreed on the policy from the settlement payment it makes to the
owner.
If the accident was the other driver's fault, and this fault
is accepted by the third party's insurer, then the vehicle owner may be able to reclaim the excess payment from the
other person's insurance company.
Compulsory excess
A compulsory excess is the minimum excess payment the insurer
will accept on the insurance policy. Minimum excesses vary according to the personal details, driving record and
insurance company.
Voluntary excess
To reduce the insurance premium, the insured party may offer
to pay a higher excess (deductible) than the compulsory excess demanded by the insurance company. The voluntary
excess is the extra amount, over and above the compulsory excess, that is agreed to be paid in the event of a claim
on the policy. As a bigger excess reduces the financial risk carried by the insurer, the insurer is able to offer a
significantly lower premium.
Basis of premium charges
Main article: auto
insurance risk selection
Depending on the jurisdiction, the insurance premium can be
either mandated by the government or determined by the insurance company, in accordance with a framework of
regulations set by the government. Often, the insurer will have more freedom to set the price on physical damage
coverages than on mandatory liability coverages.
When the premium is not mandated by the government, it is
usually derived from the calculations of an actuary, based on statistical data. The premium can
vary depending on many factors that are believed to have an impact on the expected cost of
future claims. Those factors
can include the car characteristics, the coverage selected (deductible, limit, covered perils), the profile of the
driver (age, gender,
driving history) and the usage of the car (commute to work or not, predicted annual distance
driven).
Gender
Men average more miles driven per year than
women, and have a significantly higher rate of accident
involvement.
On 1 March 2011, the European Court of Justice controversially decided
insurance companies who used gender as a risk factor when calculating insurance premiums were
breaching EU equality
laws. The Court ruled that car-insurance companies were
discriminating against men, and these practices had to stop.
Age
Teenage drivers who have no driving record will have higher
car insurance premiums. However, young drivers are often offered discounts if they undertake further driver
training on recognized courses, such as the Pass
Plus scheme in the UK. In the US many insurers offer a good-grade
discount to students with a good academic record and resident-student discounts to those who live away from home.
Generally insurance premiums tend to become lower at the age of 25. Some insurance companies offer "stand alone"
car insurance policies specifically for teenagers with lower premiums. By placing restrictions on teenagers'
driving (forbidding driving after dark, or giving rides to other teens, for example), these companies effectively
reduce their risk. A teenager driving a safer car, such as a sedan rather
than a flashy sports car, can also get lower insurance rates.
Senior drivers are often eligible for retirement
discounts, reflecting the lower average miles driven by this age group. Rates may increase for senior drivers after
age 65, due to increased risk associated with much older drivers. Typically, the increased risk for drivers over 65
years of age is associated with slower reflexes, reaction times, and being more injury-prone as a result of
aging. Additionally, older drivers between the ages of 60 and 70 in the
US must be able to demonstrate competency in order to retain a driver's license.
Driving history
In most states, moving violations, including running red
lights and speeding, assess points on a driver's driving record. Since more points indicate an increased risk of
future violations, insurance companies periodically review drivers' records, and may raise premiums accordingly.
Laws vary from state to state, but most insurers allow one moving violation every three to five years before
increasing premiums. Accidents affect insurance premiums similarly. Depending on the severity of the accident and
the number of points assessed, rates can increase by as much as twenty to thirty percent.[22] Any motoring convictions should be
disclosed to the insurers, as the driver is assessed by risk from prior experiences while driving on the
road.
Marital status
Statistics show that married drivers average fewer accidents
than the rest of the population so policy owners who are married often receive lower premiums than single
persons.[23]
Vehicle classification
Two of the most important factors that go into determining the
underwriting risk on motorized vehicles are: performance capability and retail cost. The most commonly available
providers of auto insurance have underwriting restrictions against vehicles that are either designed to be capable
of higher speeds and performance levels, or vehicles that retail above a certain dollar amount. Vehicles that are
commonly considered luxury automobiles usually carry more expensive physical damage premiums because they are more
expensive to replace.
Vehicles that can be classified as high performance autos will
carry higher premiums generally because there is greater opportunity for risky driving behavior. Motorcycle
insurance may carry lower property-damage premiums because the risk of damage to other vehicles is minimal, yet
have higher liability or personal-injury premiums, because motorcycle riders face different physical risks while on
the road. Risk classification on automobiles also takes into account the statistical analysis of reported theft,
accidents, and mechanical malfunction on every given year, make, and model of auto.
Distance
Some car insurance plans do not differentiate in regard to how
much the car is used. There are however low-mileage discounts offered by some insurance providers. Other methods of
differentiation would include: over-road distance between the ordinary residence of a subject and their ordinary,
daily destinations.
Reasonable distance estimation
Another important factor in determining car-insurance premiums
involves the annual mileage put on the vehicle, and for what reason. Driving to and from work every day at a
specified distance, especially in urban areas where common traffic routes are known, presents different risks than
how a retiree who does not work any longer may use their vehicle. Common practice has been that this information
was provided solely by the insured person, but some insurance providers have started to collect
regular odometer readings to
verify the risk.
Odometer-based systems
Cents Per Mile Now (1986) advocates classified odometer-mile rates, a type of usage-based insurance. After the company's risk factors have
been applied, and the customer has accepted the per-mile rate offered, then customers buy prepaid miles of
insurance protection as needed, like buying gallons of gasoline (litres of petrol). Insurance automatically ends
when the odometer limit
(recorded on the car's insurance ID card) is reached, unless more distance is bought. Customers keep track of miles
on their own odometer to know when to buy more. The company does no after-the-fact billing of the customer, and the
customer doesn't have to estimate a "future annual mileage" figure for the company to obtain a discount. In the
event of a traffic stop, an officer could easily verify that the insurance is current, by comparing the figure on
the insurance card to that on the odometer.
Critics point out the possibility of cheating the system
by odometer tampering. Although the
newer electronic odometers are difficult to roll back, they can still be defeated by disconnecting the odometer
wires and reconnecting them later. However, as the Cents Per Mile Now website points out:
As a practical matter, resetting odometers requires
equipment plus expertise that makes stealing insurance risky and uneconomical. For example, to steal 20,000
miles [32,200 km] of continuous protection while paying for only the 2000 in the 35000 to 37000 range on the
odometer, the resetting would have to be done at least nine times, to keep the odometer reading within the
narrow 2,000-mile [3,200 km] covered range. There are also powerful legal deterrents to this way of stealing
insurance protection. Odometers have always served as the measuring device for resale value, rental and leasing
charges, warranty limits, mechanical breakdown insurance, and cents-per-mile tax deductions or reimbursements
for business or government travel. Odometer tampering, detected during claim processing, voids the insurance
and, under decades-old state and federal law, is punishable by heavy fines and jail.
Under the cents-per-mile system, rewards for driving less are
delivered automatically, without the need for administratively cumbersome and costly GPS technology. Uniform
per-mile exposure measurement for the first time provides the basis for statistically valid rate classes. Insurer
premium income automatically keeps pace with increases or decreases in driving activity, cutting back on resulting
insurer demand for rate increases and preventing today's windfalls to insurers, when decreased driving activity
lowers costs but not premiums.
GPS-based system
In 1998, the Progressive Insurance company started a pilot program
in Texas, in which drivers received
a discount for installing a GPS-based device that tracked their driving behavior and reported the results via cellular phone to
the company. Policyholders were reportedly more upset about having to pay
for the expensive device than they were over privacy concerns. The
program was discontinued in 2000.
OBDII-based system
The Progressive Corporation launched Snapshot to give drivers a customized insurance rate based on recording how, how
much, and when their car is driven. Snapshot is currently available in 38
US states. Driving data is transmitted to the company using an on-board
telematic device. The device connects to a car's OnBoard Diagnostic (OBD-II) port (all petrol automobiles in the USA built after 1996 have an
OBD-II.) and transmits speed, time of day and number of miles the car is driven. There is no GPS in the Snapshot
device, so no location information is collected. Cars that are driven less often, in less-risky ways, and at
less-risky times of day, can receive large discounts. Progressive has received patents on its methods and systems
of implementing usage-based insurance and has licensed these methods and systems to other
companies.
Credit ratings
Insurance companies have started using credit ratings of their
policyholders to determine risk. Drivers with good credit scores get lower insurance premiums, as it is believed
that they are more financially stable, more responsible and have the financial means to better maintain their
vehicles. Those with lower credit scores can have their premiums raised or insurance canceled
outright. It has been shown that good drivers with spotty credit records
could be charged higher premiums than bad drivers with good credit records.
Behavior-based insurance
The use of non-intrusive load monitoring to
detect drunk driving and other
risky behaviors has been proposed. A US patent application combining this
technology with a usage based insurance product to create a new type of behavior based auto insurance product is currently open for
public comment on peer to patent. Free Car Insurance Quotes - Compare and Save!
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