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Insuring Cars in Parents Name



  Mondeo STTDCI


Lifted from http://www.maxpower.co.ukwww.maxpower.co.uk forums, written by respected insurance professional username over there "Shiny". Dont think Lloyd will mind me lifting the post as its very informative and he is all for educating ignorance on insurance.<SPAN class=spnMessageText id=msg>There are many posts regarding insuring cars in Parent’s names to get cheaper insurance and they often lead to heated discussions and opinions from misinformed people. Here are some facts as to why it is fraudulent and you should not do it, which I hope will put a stop to misinformed opinions and potentially dangerous advice from people who do not understand the industry, the processes and the legalities.

The first question is probably “Why should I listen to Shiny?”. If you are a regular user of the forum you would have probably realised that I do actually know my onions where insurance is concerned. I have worked in a high street Insurance Brokers for the last 17 yrs, managed the Personal Lines department (household, motor etc) and now handle Commercial insurance, specialising in Motor Trade. My advice is not tied to one Insurer and is indicative of the market, although there are obvious differences between some insurers in their methods, the basic insurance principles are the same regardless of who you are insured with.

Now, onto how it works. Firstly “Insurable Interest”, one of the basic principles of insurance. The purpose of insurance is put a policyholder in the same financial position after a claim or loss as they were before the claim or loss (with the exception of any excess etc). Therefore if my car gets stolen, and its market value was £5k, my insurers will pay me £5k to put me in the same financial position I was before the car was stolen. Now, if I was not the legal owner of the car and it belonged to, for example, my son, but I insured it in my name, I will not actually suffer any financial loss if it was stolen. Therefore I have no insurable interest. My son will actually suffer the loss, therefore he must insure it in his name. The registered keeper is not necessarily the legal owner of a car, so just changing the log book does not make this alright.

Insurance premiums are calculated on the risk exposure. Fact, young drivers are a high risk and attract high premiums. The amount of use available to a young driver as an additional driver under a policy in their parents’ name is an essential factor in the rating of a policy. It is not wrong for young drivers to be named under their parents policies as long as all the information provided to an Insurer is correct. When I was learning to drive I was added to my mother’s policy. She had been driving her own car for a number of years and used it every day to commute to work. Even when I passed my test, I was only able to drive the car in the evenings or at the weekend when she wasn’t using it. I was added to the policy and noted as a “frequent” driver (not the main driver) as this was genuinely the case and could easily be proved to be the case. When I bought my own car, I insured it in my own name.

Here are two scenarios –

1. A 17 yr old buys a car and insures it in his own name.
2. Dad buys a car for his 17 yr old son to use, Dad is the legal owner and registered keeper and therefore insures the car in Dad’s name. The car has been bought for the son and he will be the main user.

The risk exposure is exactly the same, as the 17yr old is the main driver regardless of who the policyholder is. Therefore the premium should in fact be the same. In some cases, scenario 2 will work out more expensive as discounts for insured only to drive will not apply.

Now the only way that scenario 2 will work out cheaper is if fraudulent information is provided to the insurers to make the risk look more attractive, by lying as to who is the main user of a car and saying Dad is the main user and son is only an occasional user. This is no different to lying about your age, lying about your car (saying it’s a 1.4 GL instead of 2.0 GT Turbo), lying about where you live (saying you live in a field in Devon rather than the middle of Greater Manchester). If you are providing false information to reduce your premium it is deliberately trying to misrepresent the true risk and deceiving your Insurers, which is fraud.

Now, to make matters worse, it is often the case that when policies are taken out in parent’s name, that in addition to lying about the main user, the ownership is also presented wrongly to the insurers, saying that it is the parent’s car when it has been bought by the young driver. As I have said earlier, Insurable Interest is a basic principle of insurance so, first off, there will be a major problem here. Secondly, again a risk has deliberately misrepresented to an insurer to make it look more attractive and to deceive the insurers to obtain a cheaper premium, which is fraud.

So, what happens if you have taken out a policy in your parent’s name and are found out. There is a very small possibility that an underwriter may suspect foul play when finalising the issue of policy documents or if there is an audit check, but in all fairness, you are really only like to be rumbled after an accident has occurred, which is the time when you will need your policy most of all. If a loss adjuster is involved, he will make a report to the Insurers, the underwriters will study the proposal form and if there is evidence of “non disclosure” or fraudulent information, from the information presented at the time of the proposal (which is the contract upon which the insurance is based), it is most likely they will not indemnify the claim and cancel your policy from inception, making all cover “null and void”. You will then be responsible for all costs as a result of the accident. As your insurance is invalid, there is a possibility of a motoring conviction for driving without insurance, 6 points minimum, a hefty fine, possibly even a ban. If the insurers see fit, they may also wish to prosecute you for fraud which could result in a criminal conviction. The policyholder (your parent) could also be facing the same prosecutions.

There is a question on an insurance proposal form that asks if you have ever been refused or declined insurance or had a policy cancelled by the insurers. If you end up having a policy cancelled due to non disclosure or fraud, you have to disclose this on your future policies. It is an absolute nightmare getting insurance if you have had a policy null and void under these circumstances. Only non-standard insurers will touch you and will want a very very hefty premium.

Loss adjusters are not usually involved in small claims, but at the end of the day, if the damage is £500 and your claim gets kicked out, £500 won’t cripple most people. But it’s when the claim runs into thousands of pounds that you really want your Insurance to be totally in order. I personally have dealt with a claim involving a cyclist where the reserve was £500,000. If you t-boned a car and crippled a load of Harley Street Surgeons on the way to meeting, the claim could run into £millions. Look at the Selby disaster, a few seconds of lost concentration has cost many many millions. Quite often the way the courts work is that the MIB (Motor Insurance Bureau) become involved and insist the Insurers pay the injured party. The Insurer’s then have a right to recover their outlay from you, as your policy has been invalidated due to fraud. Saving a couple of hundred pounds could cost you thousands and thousands of pounds.

So, now you know the potential consequences, you might think to yourself “how will they ever know?”. Well if a loss adjuster is involved. He will look for obvious signs, like the number of cars in the family, who is entitled to drive each car and so on, to establish a general picture. Then he will ask to see receipts, petrol receipts, servicing receipts etc and see what name they are in. If the car was still driveable, he may have been hiding and watching the pattern and use by each driver for the previous week or two before you even know he is involved (and then show you pictures to contradict any more lies you may present him with when interviewed). He will want to know how each person gets to work. Now there are other obvious things like dad owning a Saab Estate and also a Nova with a BB4 and Max Power Sunstrip and two 12” bass boxes in the boot (assuming modifications have been disclosed which is another topic entirely!) which the 17yr old son hardly drives? He may interview neighbours to establish the use by each driver, interview people at the workplaces and neighbouring work places of each driver, again to establish who drives what to where on a daily basis. I’m sure there are many other methods they use, but I hope this is drawing a picture for you. They do this every day, its their job, they know every trick, every lie, every "loophole".

I do believe there is a problem in the industry where Insurer’s employ telephonists to provide motor quotes for cost efficiency, these people are generally data input clerks and do not have the knowledge for alarm bells to ring where young drivers and parents insuring cars are concerned. The same applies to internet quotes. But they are relying on people to provide truthful information and answers, which is confirmed by the signing of the proposal form or by agreeing to the statement of fact.

Now all the legalities aside, you will not earn any no claims bonus insuring a car in your parents name. By the time you reach 21, you may have left home, and you might want a tasty car as the market has opened up being over 21. If you took out a policy in your own name at 17, although it obviously costs a fair whack at the time, provided you have been claim free, you will have 4 years NCB by the time you 21, which is 60% off the premium. So a base premium on nil NCB of £2,000 will reduce to £800. As well as the saving, you have held a legitimate policy that will pay out in the event of any claim, even a serious claim with costly damage and personal injury.

This is a very serious issue, if you cant do it properly, you might as well not do it at all. Insurance costs are part of car ownership. If you cant afford to insure your car properly, quite simply you cant afford to have a car.

RF Shiny69UK<IMG title="" height=15 alt="" src= "http://forum.maxpower.co"></SPAN>

[Edited by Roamer on 04 October 2004 at 1:34pm]

[Edited by KDF on 10/12/2004 4:45:51 PM]
 
  don't


bumping this so mod can make it sticky

could maybe do with pruning 2 make it more readable though

lots of text 2 get through there
 


The only other thing I would also say is that it is FALSE ECONOMY going through your parents.

Also the Accelerated Bonus Schemes are a great way for young drivers to reduce the cost and gain much needed NCB......60% at 20.

Thats why i can run a Clio V6 at 20.

Cheers Stuart


[Edited by stusV6 on 04 October 2004 at 5:41pm]
 
  Mondeo STTDCI


Glad this was made sticky, its the best advice there is out there. Thanks to Lloyd (he now knows its here and has given his permission etc). Hope some ppl see sense.
 


How do people afford it then ?????

I ran myself through elephant at 17 on a 998cc corsa and they want £2400 ??? the cars only worth £3k



Stupid IMO , its encouraging un-insured drivers
 


Its high becuase its a KNOWN fact that young drivers cause the most accidents! We cant escape this!

Take it like a man ;)

Drive and insure the smallest gayest car you can, youll be able to insure a 600bhp Supra in no time!!
 


Quote: Originally posted by Jonny-SI on 04 October 2004


How do people afford it then ?????

I ran myself through elephant at 17 on a 998cc corsa and they want £2400 ??? the cars only worth £3k



Stupid IMO , its encouraging un-insured drivers





Hey Jonny...................you need to sit on the phone for a while cause at £2400 for 998cc thats just nuts...................and there IS a lot cheaper out there............and I mean a lot cheaper.

Try http://www.confused.comwww.confused.com and see what they come up with.

Cya Stu
 


I will try confused and my dad is ringing round today



I dont have the corsa but i was trying it as its groupm 1 i think , i actually have a group 6 Clio and they wanted more for that



Gotta be done i suppose, i am hoping the people that do my dads garage insurance might be able to help out
 


That is the best post ive seen on Cliosport, ever! I think something like that should be sent to each parent when their son or daughter comes of age to drive, maybe after theyve past their driving test, or on their 17th Birthday. A lot of sons/ daughters have mummy and daddy wrapped around their fingers, whatever little Johnny/ Suzie wants they get. Just hope more parents will see sense and put their foot down and make Suzie/ Johnny bleeding well earn their no claims like the rest of us law abiding folk!

Rant over! :oops:
 
  don't


in a way its like claiming benefits, u cheat the system and save loads of money while the rest of us pay, my first car was a rover metro 1.1 was plenty fast enough for me at 17, paid 4 myself along with insurance of £1400

at 17/18 ur meant 2 be an adult, so act like 1 and take responsibility
 


Me and my friend have exactly the same situation. Im on my own insurance, my friend is on his mums (on his V reg fiesta) We are both 20 and have been driving for just over 3 years. I have 2 years no claims now, he obviously has none. The insurance payments were as follows


Year 1 (me=1.1 £750 fiesta, L reg - Him, v reg fiesta)

My insurance: £975
His Insurance: £760
Year 2 (me=1.3 £3,500 fiesta, Y reg - Him, v reg fiesta)

My insurance: £975
His Insurance: £730
Year 3 (me=1.2 16v Clio, 04 reg - him, v reg fiesta)

My insurance: £680
His Insurance: £680
So by the third year, were both paying the same. Ive paid £460 more than him in total, but hes now with NO NCB, and hes leaving home, so will have to insure himself now (in a rough area!)

So this shows that it DOES pay to have your own insurance; if you have to make do with a sh*tty car for a year then so be it, its only 1 year ffs, and the slow car might save your life in your first year of driving, while things are pretty new still.

Also, should he crash, hell be right down sh*t street, without any form of paddle!
 


This is exactly where the Accelerated Bonus Scheme comes into its own cause you would have had lower premiums in the first place and would now be sitting on 60%.....................just a thought;)

Cya Stu
 
  Ford F-150 5.4 V8


As for insurance ive always payed my own, first car a 120bhp XR2 payed £1400 third party at 17! then a brand new 1.4 clio at 18 that cost £1500 fully comp dropping to bout £900 after 2-3 years. then the 172 at 21 which cost 1300 fully comp, now 23 an i only pay 900 quid fully comp on a Focus RS. Cost me to get here but now i can afford the car i always wanted but can also afford the insurance, had i got to 23 on my parents with no NCBs they wouldnt touch me for a RS.

As an example

at 18 me an my best mate both bought the 1.4 clios i insured in my name him in his dads! Payed bout £200 more a year than him

Now tho i drive a Focus RS an he still a 1.4 Clio, he wants to buy my 172 but cant get insured!!!
 


exactly, its cost me over £800 for my insurance TPFT, could have gone on my parents insurance, but im glad i didnt! im now looking for a valver, that i can afford to insure by myself!

youve gota take the plunge and get your own insurance one day, its better to get your first policy on a 1.2 at a younger age etc, than on a 2.0 litre which will cost you a fortune in a few year time on your own policy!
 


My folks refused to insure my car in their name for the reason of the NCB issue, glad they didnt as it meant I could insure a 205 gti at 21 for £700FC!
 
  Mondeo STTDCI


This post WAS stickied im sure. Just had to search for it to get the link to put into another thread...why unstickied?!
 


Quote: Originally posted by FN04 XZE on 06 October 2004


Me and my friend have exactly the same situation. Im on my own insurance, my friend is on his mums (on his V reg fiesta) We are both 20 and have been driving for just over 3 years. I have 2 years no claims now, he obviously has none. The insurance payments were as follows


Year 1 (me=1.1 £750 fiesta, L reg - Him, v reg fiesta)

My insurance: £975
His Insurance: £760
Year 2 (me=1.3 £3,500 fiesta, Y reg - Him, v reg fiesta)

My insurance: £975
His Insurance: £730
Year 3 (me=1.2 16v Clio, 04 reg - him, v reg fiesta)

My insurance: £680
His Insurance: £680
So by the third year, were both paying the same. Ive paid £460 more than him in total, but hes now with NO NCB, and hes leaving home, so will have to insure himself now (in a rough area!)

So this shows that it DOES pay to have your own insurance; if you have to make do with a sh*tty car for a year then so be it, its only 1 year ffs, and the slow car might save your life in your first year of driving, while things are pretty new still.

Also, should he crash, hell be right down sh*t street, without any form of paddle!
AMEN
 


I am currently 18 and have been insured under my mums insurance for over a year and a half. Although it sounded good at the time, I simply could not get insurance in my own name. My car is a 03 Clio 1.6 Dynamique. The cheapest quote that I could get at the time was £3047. When it came to renewal, the cheapest I could get was £2870. There was no way that I would pay that much for yearly insurance. I am now a student at university in central london so could not take the car. So at the moment, my mum is driving the car more than I am! But I see the point. I will be trying to get insurance in my own name in my last year at university or as soon as I graduate.

Insurance at 17/18 is extremely difficult to find for a decent or reasonable price. Sure, my age group is classified as the most risky, but do they have to be extortionate? I will however be definatly insuring my car in my own name when I reach 21.
 


good points but the thing is that insurers have become so afraid of young people now that the only thing most people under 20 can afford to insure is a f**king metro. i have been trying to get insured on my own name since i started driving but the simple fact is that they wont touch me, for near enough anything, so in order to drive a decent car i wont look absolutely ridiculous in... i need to be insured under my parents policy. silly quotes like £9,000 per year to insure a clio sport 172 in my own name dont help matters. if insurance wasnt so expensive in the first place then everyone would drive under their own name.
 
  500bhp Scoob


i know of alot of young people, my age, that bought the car, then went round finding insurance quotes, only to find out they cant insure it, without it totally breaking the bank.

I say tough to them, its their fault for not looking into it.

Am currently paying 1200 a year on a K reg 1.4 Clio.
(Modifications declared, not charged for any).

At the end of the day you will get stung, people getting insured on their parents policy is only delaying it.

May aswell take the shafting whilst your still young, and climb the "car ladder" as you get older.
 
  H22A7 Accord Type R


i canny be bothered reading all that right now but.............i do like the closing line.......

This is a very serious issue, if you cant do it properly, you might as well not do it at all. Insurance costs are part of car ownership. If you cant afford to insure your car properly, quite simply you cant afford to have a car.
 


Theres a girl up the road from me who bought a car and insured it in her dads name. She then had an accident in France injuring someone and the Insurance company refuse to pay plus the French person is sueing for injury. The parents may have to sell there house to cover the costs and claims etc!.......Well thats what you get for trying to be clever and thats a factor why we pay high premiums!
 


Quote: Originally posted by R3OBC on 21 January 2005
i canny be bothered reading all that right now but.............i do like the closing line.......This is a very serious issue, if you cant do it properly, you might as well not do it at all. Insurance costs are part of car ownership. If you cant afford to insure your car properly, quite simply you cant afford to have a car.




some people have no option! no insurer will touch me. and im 20 its not like im 17. like i just said, if insurance werent so unbelievably expensive, everyone would do it properly - blame the insurers... not so long ago it wasnt hard to insure a car at 18, now its nigh on impossible
 


Quote: Originally posted by ant_oneill on 21 January 2005


Quote: Originally posted by R3OBC on 21 January 2005


i canny be bothered reading all that right now but.............i do like the closing line.......

This is a very serious issue, if you cant do it properly, you might as well not do it at all. Insurance costs are part of car ownership. If you cant afford to insure your car properly, quite simply you cant afford to have a car.


some people have no option! no insurer will touch me. and im 20 its not like im 17. like i just said, if insurance werent so unbelievably expensive, everyone would do it properly - blame the insurers... not so long ago it wasnt hard to insure a car at 18, now its nigh on impossible
think you have missed the point entirely.

you do have an option is to legally insure a car that you can get cover on

if its a mk2 fiesta and not a 172mk2 then thats just tough titties!

remember every time an insurer loses money through a fraudulant insurance policy everyone else pays the price throough higher premiums.

doing it is a self defeating activity YOU WILL NEVER WIN!
 


i havent missed the point at all.

i would LOVE to be able to go on my own insurance - insurers make it too difficult!

i phoned elephant yesterday and they quoted me £9,000. should i sell my 172 now to buy an A reg metro 1.0 or the like? just so i can get insured in my own name?
 
  H22A7 Accord Type R


im lookin at £1000 to insure my modded 1.2 16v in March, mainly due to joy riders who cost me my 2yrs NCB................i have spent £1600 over the last 2 renewals for it. All part of owning costs, and it can be a bitter pill to swallow at times!!

Rob.

[Edited by R3OBC on 21 January 2005 at 10:50pm]

and i am 22!
 


Quote: Originally posted by ant_oneill on 21 January 2005

i havent missed the point at all.

i would LOVE to be able to go on my own insurance - insurers make it too difficult!

i phoned elephant yesterday and they quoted me £9,000. should i sell my 172 now to buy an A reg metro 1.0 or the like? just so i can get insured in my own name?
yes
 


Quote: Originally posted by iceblue182 on 21 January 2005
Quote: Originally posted by ant_oneill on 21 January 2005i havent missed the point at all.

i would LOVE to be able to go on my own insurance - insurers make it too difficult!

i phoned elephant yesterday and they quoted me £9,000. should i sell my 172 now to buy an A reg metro 1.0 or the like? just so i can get insured in my own name?[/QUOTE]yes


whatever
 
  H22A7 Accord Type R


i agree tho in a way, my mate runs a civic type R in his dads name. He went from saxo vtrs, to Bmw Mini, and now has a type R. Im still goin strong on my 2nd 1.2 ;) one day.............onnnneee day!
 


The technical name for this is "fronting"

Be a man and take it the hard way...

Most of us here have done and were now being rewarded with reasonable quotes due to longer NCB.

Insurance premiums are calculated on the risk exposure. Fact, young drivers are a high risk and attract high premiums

I was like you once and had similar thought and opnions on this but as I have got older it makes sense!
 


the way i look at it... insurers have bumped up the insurance prices way too much over the past few years. its never been harder to insure a car than it is now. some people have money and should therefore be able to afford a nice car and to run it.

5 years ago it was easy to insure a car equivalent to todays clio 172 at 18/19 years of age and build up your NCB, thats why some of you people who are 24+ can sit back and say its wrong to insure cars the way we have to do it.
 


Quote: Originally posted by ant_oneill on 21 January 2005

the way i look at it... insurers have bumped up the insurance prices way too much over the past few years. its never been harder to insure a car than it is now. some people have money and should therefore be able to afford a nice car and to run it.

5 years ago it was easy to insure a car equivalent to todays clio 172 at 18/19 years of age and build up your NCB, thats why some of you people who are 24+ can sit back and say its wrong to insure cars the way we have to do it.
sadly thats just not true

i had a group10 car at 18 (1997) and i paid 3k to insure it my name fully comp.

i had the money to buy a pug gti which is what i wanted group 14 but i couldnt get insurance for toffee

its always been like this and its like this for a very good reason us blokes are high risk because we thnk we are invicible.
 
  Fiat Coupe 20v turbo


I have always paid my own insurance in my own name...even after getting a DD40 and I dont have a particularly well paid job...I just started off with a 1.0 205, then 1.3 Escort, Saxo Vtr and now Williams. IMHO if you start off driving in a SUITABLE car you will have no problems insuring it in your own name!
 


i had a ford ka as my first car... insurance group 2 i think

they wanted £4,000 to insure me on my own

no one in the right mind would pay that much for a car like that
 


Are you in located in Ireland Ant?

Different kettle of fish if so...

Right b*****d to get insured there :(
 


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