Insurance question. I hit my own car!

Insurance question. I hit my own car!

Author
Discussion

mirandamilly

Original Poster:

87 posts

168 months

I was at work and I drove into my own, personal car in the work forklift.

I ve caused at least a grand s worth of damage to my car.

Any advice about managing this through insurance? I was intending to claim on the business policy. But is my own business and it s also my own car. Any specific complications I should be aware of?

MOMACC

506 posts

52 months

No

You damaged your vehicle which is insured personally with an item of plant which is insured I presume by the company.

Ring both insurers and explain. If your excess is below a grand on the company policy crack on with a claim.

BertBert

20,348 posts

226 months

surely your company will just pay to have it fixed and not trouble any insurance companies?

balise

2,118 posts

225 months

BertBert said:
surely your company will just pay to have it fixed and not trouble any insurance companies?
This.

paul_c123

814 posts

8 months

It can't be that uncommon, for example insurance claims where one car hits another of theirs during parking on a driveway, or hitting your own house or garage or wall etc. The individual vs business angle makes it a bit different though. I'd have thought the cost of losing a NCB, together with any excess and higher future insurance premiums makes the £ bar for not claiming at all, quite high.

Actual

1,286 posts

121 months

mirandamilly said:
I ve caused at least a grand s worth of damage to my car.
Don't go through any insurance.

I had 2 claims in quick succession and I wish I had just paid for them myself.

For 5 years on every insurance quote I have to trot out the guilty details.

A car manufacturer would not insure me for a courtesy car because I had 2 claims (not convictions).

A world of pain. Avoid.

Also please no one chip in and tell me that I need to report all claims because I have.

OutInTheShed

11,422 posts

41 months

Actual said:
Don't go through any insurance.

I had 2 claims in quick succession and I wish I had just paid for them myself.

For 5 years on every insurance quote I have to trot out the guilty details.

A car manufacturer would not insure me for a courtesy car because I had 2 claims (not convictions).

A world of pain. Avoid.

Also please no one chip in and tell me that I need to report all claims because I have.
It's 'incidents' you need to reports, as well as claims.

Actual

1,286 posts

121 months

OutInTheShed said:
Actual said:
Don't go through any insurance.

I had 2 claims in quick succession and I wish I had just paid for them myself.

For 5 years on every insurance quote I have to trot out the guilty details.

A car manufacturer would not insure me for a courtesy car because I had 2 claims (not convictions).

A world of pain. Avoid.

Also please no one chip in and tell me that I need to report all claims because I have.
It's 'incidents' you need to reports, as well as claims.
I said no one chip in.

Mr Tidy

26,863 posts

142 months

If you give full details to your business insurer I don't think they will be interested as you can't be a Third Party to yourself!

I'd claim on the policy for the car if repairs cost more than I wanted to pay.

John D.

19,271 posts

224 months

balise said:
BertBert said:
surely your company will just pay to have it fixed and not trouble any insurance companies?
This.
Its his company.

kiethton

14,234 posts

195 months

Just get the company to pay surely, you're already 19%/25% better off from the corp tax saving.

Sure they can give it a good all-body machine polish, full valet, full service and tyres to make sure no critical parts were damaged too. All comes off any pre-tax profits and you're not declaring anything.

mirandamilly

Original Poster:

87 posts

168 months

The quote from the body shop is £4k

BertBert

20,348 posts

226 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
John D. said:
Its his company.
I think most of us worked that out from the OP

Lefty

18,204 posts

217 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
mirandamilly said:
The quote from the body shop is £4k
Ouch. Shop around?

ymwoods

2,193 posts

192 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
kiethton said:
Just get the company to pay surely, you're already 19%/25% better off from the corp tax saving.

Sure they can give it a good all-body machine polish, full valet, full service and tyres to make sure no critical parts were damaged too. All comes off any pre-tax profits and you're not declaring anything.
This, assuming, of course, the business is flush enough to do so without any cashflow issues. We don't all own Harrods.

ashenfie

1,402 posts

61 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
I would claim on your personal insurance else you will have effectively a claim on both policy’s. I might that I found the car with a big dent in on return.

Else you’re going to have a hike in costs when it becomes time to renew.

davek_964

10,160 posts

190 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
ashenfie said:
I would claim on your personal insurance else you will have effectively a claim on both policy s. I might that I found the car with a big dent in on return.

Else you re going to have a hike in costs when it becomes time to renew.
Yeah - good advice. Insurance fraud is always a good idea.

And there is also no guarantee that it would lead to higher costs at renewal, despite it being repeated in every single thread like this on here.

cobra kid

5,375 posts

255 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
Actual said:
OutInTheShed said:
Actual said:
Don't go through any insurance.

I had 2 claims in quick succession and I wish I had just paid for them myself.

For 5 years on every insurance quote I have to trot out the guilty details.

A car manufacturer would not insure me for a courtesy car because I had 2 claims (not convictions).

A world of pain. Avoid.

Also please no one chip in and tell me that I need to report all claims because I have.
It's 'incidents' you need to reports, as well as claims.
I said no one chip in.
Ha ha!!!!

loskie

6,273 posts

135 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
yes

Great advice to lie to your and your company's insurance co's.

As the owner of the car make a claim off your company insurance.

It's your company that will be the policy holder not you the individual.

rhamnousia5

573 posts

9 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
loskie said:
yes

Great advice to lie to your and your company's insurance co's.

As the owner of the car make a claim off your company insurance.

It's your company that will be the policy holder not you the individual.
As it’s the OP’s company (and he was driving a company vehicle )how can he sue himself for negligence that caused damage to his own property?