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Insurance Most Expensive Car To Insure Vs Least Expensive
Basis of
premium charges
Depending on the jurisdiction, the insurance premium can
be either mandated by the government or determined by the insurance
company in accordance to 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 do, and have a
proportionally higher accident involvement at all ages. Insurance
companies cite women's lower accident involvement in keeping the
youth surcharge lower for young women drivers than for their male
counterparts but adult rates are generally unisex. Reference to the
lower rate for young women as "the women's discount" has
caused confusion that was evident in news reports on a recently defeated
EC proposal to make it illegal to consider gender in assessing insurance
premiums. Ending the discount would have made no difference to most
women's premiums.
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 U.S. 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. Senior drivers are often eligible for retirement discounts
reflecting lower average miles driven by this age group.
Distance
Some car insurance plans do not differentiate in regard to how
much the car is used. However, methods of differentiation would include:
Reasonable
estimation
Several car insurance plans rely on a reasonable estimation of
the average annual distance expected to be driven which is provided by
the insured. This discount benefits drivers who drive their cars
infrequently but has no actuarial value since it is unverified.
Odometer-based
systems
Cents Per Mile Now (1986) advocates classified odometer-mile rates.
After the company's risk factors have been applied and the customer has
accepted the per-mile rate offered, customers buy prepaid miles of
insurance protection as needed, like buying gallons of gasoline.
Insurance automatically ends when the odometer limit (recorded on the
car’s insurance ID card) is reached unless more miles are 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, in order to steal 20,000 miles of continuous
protection while paying for only the 2,000 miles from 35,000 miles to
37,000 miles 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 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 need for administratively cumbersome and
costly 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, Progressive Insurance started a pilot program in Texas in
which volunteers installed a GPS-based technology called Autograph in
exchange for a discount. The device 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. In 1996, Progressive filed for and
obtained a US patent (US patent 5,797134) on their process. Progressive
has also filed corresponding patent applications in Europe and Japan.
UK auto insurer, Norwich Union, has obtained an exclusive license to
Progressive's European patent application. They have recently completed
a successful pilot test of the technology and it is now available
commercially under the trade name "Pay As You Drive"
OBDII-based
system
In 2004, Progressive launched another pilot program to allow
policyholders to earn a discount on their premiums by consenting to use
its Trip Sense device. Trip Sense connects to a car's Onboard Diagnostic
(OBD-II) port, which exists in all cars built after 1996. The discount
is forfeited if the device is disconnected for a significant amount of
time.
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