Pay Monthly Insurance – How much?!
Pay Monthly Insurance – How much?!
Author
Discussion

APanda

Original Poster:

1,391 posts

167 months

Tuesday 19th June 2012
quotequote all
So the girlfriend has just bought her first car (she's 24 but had a license for years) and it now comes to insuring the thing. 1.2 2008 Punto gives a premium of about £1250 for the year, although she is paying monthly, so I told her to expect a bit of interest for the finance and it would be maybe £100-£150 more...

So quote goes through fine, then she gets told unflinchingly by the person on the other end of the phone that the option to pay monthly "just" puts it up to £1950! I've paid monthly before and it wasn't a price hike of £700. This is by far the cheapest we've found too. That's over a 50% rate on interest. Feel properly violated by the insurance companies.

Is this normal, and why would it be so high?




LuS1fer

43,041 posts

265 months

Tuesday 19th June 2012
quotequote all
Can she not apply for a credit card offering 0% on purchases for 12-18m and then pay that off monthly?

Coldfuse

518 posts

214 months

Tuesday 19th June 2012
quotequote all
Thats way too high surely?

APanda

Original Poster:

1,391 posts

167 months

Tuesday 19th June 2012
quotequote all
LuS1fer said:
Can she not apply for a credit card offering 0% on purchases for 12-18m and then pay that off monthly?
That's definitely an idea, although she's just taken a lump of finance out to close credit cards etc. So not sure if it would work.

My frustration is really why the same product can cost £700 more.

Noger

7,117 posts

269 months

Tuesday 19th June 2012
quotequote all
Admiral ?

IrateNinja

769 posts

198 months

Tuesday 19th June 2012
quotequote all
Noger said:
Admiral ?
Must be. Elephant tried that when I was 17 and on my first policy.

StottyZr

6,860 posts

183 months

Tuesday 19th June 2012
quotequote all
Noger said:
Admiral ?
It will be. There has been a few threads about this recently.

APanda

Original Poster:

1,391 posts

167 months

Tuesday 19th June 2012
quotequote all
StottyZr said:
It will be. There has been a few threads about this recently.
It was the same with others too, some that aren't in the same group as admiral. Must have missed the threads, I'll see if the search is working. Do you recall if it was solved somehow?

IrateNinja

769 posts

198 months

Tuesday 19th June 2012
quotequote all
APanda said:
Do you recall if it was solved somehow?
Go with a different insurer, or pay on a credit card.

Riknos

4,701 posts

224 months

Tuesday 19th June 2012
quotequote all
It's an 'idiots' tax - punishing you for not having the foresight to save up enough, or to apply for a 0% credit card.

iphonedyou

10,049 posts

177 months

Tuesday 19th June 2012
quotequote all
Riknos said:
It's an 'idiots' tax - punishing you for not having the foresight to save up enough, or to apply for a 0% credit card.
Aren't you quite the charmer?

Jobbo

13,528 posts

284 months

Tuesday 19th June 2012
quotequote all
It's probably to take account of the risk that the insured stops paying if they write the car off after 6 months. So many people seem to think that paying monthly means they have a monthly policy, when it's an annual policy and a finance agreement over 12 months, so you have to keep paying whatever happens.

Amateurish

8,213 posts

242 months

Tuesday 19th June 2012
quotequote all
APanda said:
That's definitely an idea, although she's just taken a lump of finance out to close credit cards etc. So not sure if it would work.

My frustration is really why the same product can cost £700 more.
It is the same product and it does cost the same. When you ask for "pay monthly" you are just asking the insurer to give you credit for the premium. In this case you are paying £700 to borrow the money.

APanda

Original Poster:

1,391 posts

167 months

Tuesday 19th June 2012
quotequote all
Amateurish said:
It is the same product and it does cost the same. When you ask for "pay monthly" you are just asking the insurer to give you credit for the premium. In this case you are paying £700 to borrow the money.
Thanks for clarifying that, she was prepared to pay some, but I just don't think over 50% interest is on to be honest.

We've tried different insurance companies, but they all seem to be at it.

Noger

7,117 posts

269 months

Tuesday 19th June 2012
quotequote all
Amateurish said:
It is the same product and it does cost the same. When you ask for "pay monthly" you are just asking the insurer to give you credit for the premium. In this case you are paying £700 to borrow the money.
Sort of. Admiral offer a discount for paying annualy (that is price on the aggregator). So if you want to pay monthly you get a) Interest Charge b) Removal of Discount.

Of course, this is clearly an idiot tax. The idea that Admiral would put a very low price on a comparison site to drive them to the top spot, take you to their site, where they can get you to call up to get a monthly policy and sell "face to face" is clearly a nonsense smile

Edited by Noger on Tuesday 19th June 10:59

LuS1fer

43,041 posts

265 months

Tuesday 19th June 2012
quotequote all
Have you tried Budget?

My wife used them once and they were competitive at the time.

Rob P

5,803 posts

284 months

Tuesday 19th June 2012
quotequote all
They all do it, but that is way OTT. AA quoted me £288 yesterday, £320 if I pay it in installments. That is the level of charge I think is reasonable.

APanda

Original Poster:

1,391 posts

167 months

Tuesday 19th June 2012
quotequote all
Rob P said:
They all do it, but that is way OTT. AA quoted me £288 yesterday, £320 if I pay it in installments. That is the level of charge I think is reasonable.
Exactly, that's what, 12ish percent? I think it'd be reasonable up to 20 to be fair.

philmots

4,660 posts

280 months

Tuesday 19th June 2012
quotequote all
0% card.. If she just got a loan she'll get a card

APanda

Original Poster:

1,391 posts

167 months

Tuesday 19th June 2012
quotequote all
philmots said:
0% card.. If she just got a loan she'll get a card
She thinks not. I don't have a leg to stand on trying to persuade her, her being one of those bankers and all.