Observer wrote:
JT wrote:
NCD is purely about having a proven track record of avoiding claims. How can it "expire"?
It's a track record of engaging in activity which carries risk without any loss materialising. If a person hasn't engaged in the activity, there is no possibility of a loss materialising. If the track record is less recent, it's less significant.
Logically, if the person hasn't engaged in the activity then that shouldn't worsen their previous record. For the Ins. company to claim that the NCD record diminishes because of lack of exposure is exactly as logical as the driver saying their NCD risk should improve because they haven't had a claim!
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Maybe the risk activity was continued on another insurance but that policyholder then benefits (or not) from the additional driver's track record. NCD can only accrues for a single driver on a single vehicle. If two or more drivers of one vehicle, they can't all claim the NCD.
Ah. But if my wife had an accident in my car during her sabbatical, it would adversely affect her insurance rating when she next took out her own policy (as well as losing her no claims by default). So they already have a mechanism for penalising a driver who drives on another policy but not one for rewarding them.
The only notion that makes even a slight modicum of sense is that of the conditions under which the NCD was earned becoming less relevant as the years go by. But how accurate is this? My wife drove for c. 10 years claim free, so is it fair to say that this "claim avoiding ability" completely dissipates during just two years of driving on someone else's policy.
Sorry, but I think this is just another typical "Insurance small print" method of extracting money from us, the same as the way that part-year policies aren't charged pro-rata, the same as the way that non-fault drivers with total loss claims lose the remaining part years cover without any refund, the same way that NCD stops counting up at 5 years, yet still counts down when you have a claim - how can a driver with 25 years NCD be penalised as heavily for a single claim as one with just 5?
I remain convinced that one of the basic problems with insurance companies is that they introduce the notion that it is perfectly reasonable to employ dodgy business practices such as this. Is it any wonder that their customers then have so little compunction towards defrauding them in the event of a claim, in order to try and redress the balance?
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Perhaps the answer is to buy a wreck and keep it insured at minimum cost to maintain the NCD?
Or better still just insure someone elses unused old wreck for them. Which exactly demonstrates my point that it's all a game, doesn't it? It is ok to go and insure a "wreck" and expose it to zero risk in order to build up NCD, yet in reality this is no different to the situation of not having a policy at all, except that the Ins. Company is getting some money for nothing in the meantime!