roadrunner
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posted on 11/8/17 at 09:27 AM |
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Car insurance claim
Hi all.
My wife had a little bump on our shared drive last weekend with there daughters Toyota. She damaged the bumper and boot door.
I managed to pop there bumper back ok, and pull 90% of there boot door straight leaving the ripples to straighten out.
We have just had the repair quote back of £850.
I'm going to make a claim on the insurance. I can either claim on the wife's car that we have only been using for 2 years and that's
all the no claims is on it. Or I can claim on my insurance which has full protected no claims on it.
Which route would be cheapest in the long run.
Was tempted to claim on mine and get it detailed at the same time.
Regards
Brad.
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craigdiver
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posted on 11/8/17 at 09:37 AM |
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quote: Originally posted by roadrunner
Hi all.
My wife had a little bump on our shared drive last weekend with there daughters Toyota. She damaged the bumper and boot door.
I managed to pop there bumper back ok, and pull 90% of there boot door straight leaving the ripples to straighten out.
We have just had the repair quote back of £850.
I'm going to make a claim on the insurance. I can either claim on the wife's car that we have only been using for 2 years and that's
all the no claims is on it. Or I can claim on my insurance which has full protected no claims on it.
Which route would be cheapest in the long run.
Was tempted to claim on mine and get it detailed at the same time.
Regards
Brad.
I personally, would go down the non-fraudulent route and claim on the insurance of the car that caused the damage.
If it ain't broken, fix it anyway (just because).
Building - BMW powered Haynes Roadster/442E hybrid.
Volvo C30 T5 Polestar
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24vseven
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posted on 11/8/17 at 09:55 AM |
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having worked in this area and dealt with insurance companies i would claim on your wife's car for 2 reasons.
firstly, protected no claims discount is only that they will not reduce your level of no claims for one claim in that year so if you were to have a
second claim that would wipe the protection out, additionally its only a protection on level of discount nothing else you will still show a fault
accident against you therefore increasing you as a risk in there eyes and therefore the premium before discount,
secondly, the insurance assessors will look for inconsistency in the claim and will note that the "damage" to your car may not match the
damage to the other car and may reject the claim leaving you further out of pocket plus open to a charge of fraud at the extreme.
as mentioned above unfortunately honesty id the best policy with insurance claims
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roadrunner
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posted on 11/8/17 at 10:00 AM |
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Thanks fellas.
I should of mentioned that the when I say it's the wife's car, it is actually mine with the wife added on. ;-(
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owelly
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posted on 11/8/17 at 11:19 AM |
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I'll also add, that anyone who is named on your policies needs to declare the claim/accident on ALL the policies. So you'll be telling
both policy underwriters about the claim anyway.
http://www.ppcmag.co.uk
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02GF74
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posted on 11/8/17 at 04:37 PM |
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How much is a boot door off ebay?
£850 quoted but how much is your excess?
If you claim, regardless of ncb protection, your insurance will go up.
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