AA renewal prices depend on age of applicant!
AA renewal prices depend on age of applicant!
Author
Discussion

NickCLotus

Original Poster:

148 posts

23 months

Tuesday 27th May
quotequote all
Just discovered that the AA are basing renewal cost on the age of the applicant! It is cheaper for me if I renew in the name of my neighbour accross the road who is a few years younger than me.

Edited by NickCLotus on Tuesday 27th May 20:30

TheDrownedApe

1,445 posts

72 months

Tuesday 27th May
quotequote all
Hmm never thought of this before. I'm assuming same name, address, everything except age.

Do they think that the older the more likely to maintain their vehicle?

My lads AA is due fro renewal soon and never likely to renew due to the 3x cost I will look at "fronting" his recovery this time when i get quotes.

Thanks

Sheepshanks

37,447 posts

135 months

Tuesday 27th May
quotequote all
NickCLotus said:
Just discovered that the AA are basing renewal cost on the age of the applicant! It is cheaper for me if I renew in the name of my neighbour accross the road who is a few years younger than me.
What happens if you use your name but change your DOB?

Gavin0478

479 posts

157 months

Tuesday 27th May
quotequote all
May i suggest you look elsewhere for breakdown cover. The comparison sites now offer this and including homestart and key cover for 2 cars and 2 drivers it was more than half the price of AA for one.

DavePanda

6,742 posts

250 months

Tuesday 27th May
quotequote all
That's nothing, when i moved house Green Flag increased the premium because more people breakdown in the area confused Why should that effect me who has never broken down in 30 years

georgeyboy12345

3,950 posts

51 months

Tuesday 27th May
quotequote all
TheDrownedApe said:
Hmm never thought of this before. I'm assuming same name, address, everything except age.

Do they think that the older the more likely to maintain their vehicle?

My lads AA is due fro renewal soon and never likely to renew due to the 3x cost I will look at "fronting" his recovery this time when i get quotes.

Thanks
No, my neighbour has a Lexus RX450h and I drive a diesel Range Rover Evoque.

anonymous-user

70 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
DavePanda said:
That's nothing, when i moved house Green Flag increased the premium because more people breakdown in the area confused Why should that effect me who has never broken down in 30 years
The same reason your car insurance goes up if you moved to an area more prone to car theft, or your home insurance would if you moved somewhere common for flooding.

Breakdown cover is essentially just an insurance policy, scaling prices dependent on the perceived risk.

Alickadoo

2,994 posts

39 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
Add car breakdown cover to your house insurance when you renew. Cheap as chips.


Lester H

3,482 posts

121 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
Gavin0478 said:
May i suggest you look elsewhere for breakdown cover. The comparison sites now offer this and including homestart and key cover for 2 cars and 2 drivers it was more than half the price of AA for one.
If you have left the AA, there are, regularly, ads in the ‘posh’ weekend papers for discounted offers. They appear to be genuine. The problem with some providers is that they rescue your vehicle to home but do not do any roadside repairs . One has a £25 add- on to be paid to the rescue driver if the car is over a certain age. Because of the faffing about involved, the big names can be a better bet.

s94wht

2,142 posts

75 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
Rat_Fink_67 said:
The same reason your car insurance goes up if you moved to an area more prone to car theft, or your home insurance would if you moved somewhere common for flooding.

Breakdown cover is essentially just an insurance policy, scaling prices dependent on the perceived risk.
Right, but where you live doesn't affect the reliability of your car. Unless he's moved to the South Pole or something.

NickCLotus

Original Poster:

148 posts

23 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
Sheepshanks said:
What happens if you use your name but change your DOB?
Just tried and it is cheaper

Pica-Pica

15,267 posts

100 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
Use StartRescue. A small annual fee, then a £30 excess per call out. I use that, I last called someone out several decades ago.

Funky Squirrel

445 posts

88 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
s94wht said:
Right, but where you live doesn't affect the reliability of your car. Unless he's moved to the South Pole or something.
It certainly does, most journeys are within 20 miles of your home. Live in an area with potholes, speed ramps, large hills etc more claims, higher risk.

phil4

1,494 posts

254 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
I thought they were prevented from changing price (at least for car insurance) based on gender... since age is also one of the "protected characteristics" you're not allowed to discriminate on, I wonder how they're getting around that.

richhead

2,622 posts

27 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
georgeyboy12345 said:
No, my neighbour has a Lexus RX450h and I drive a diesel Range Rover Evoque.
Wild guess but this is more likely why your quote was higher.

Krikkit

27,489 posts

197 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
phil4 said:
I thought they were prevented from changing price (at least for car insurance) based on gender... since age is also one of the "protected characteristics" you're not allowed to discriminate on, I wonder how they're getting around that.
In UK law they can only discriminate on things like age, gender etc where there's no provable evidence of it being a significant factor in risk.

The European courts ruled that gender discrimination was unlawful, so that superceded it.


Sheepshanks

37,447 posts

135 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
phil4 said:
I thought they were prevented from changing price (at least for car insurance) based on gender... since age is also one of the "protected characteristics" you're not allowed to discriminate on, I wonder how they're getting around that.
That can’t be right otherwise car insurance wouldn’t be dear for youngsters. And very old people - indeed many insurers won’t cover old people at all.

dhutch

16,619 posts

213 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
phil4 said:
I thought they were prevented from changing price (at least for car insurance) based on gender... since age is also one of the "protected characteristics" you're not allowed to discriminate on, I wonder how they're getting around that.
aholes?

anonymous-user

70 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
s94wht said:
Right, but where you live doesn't affect the reliability of your car. Unless he's moved to the South Pole or something.
But, if statistically there are a higher concentration of breakdowns within a certain postcode area, then that's the data they're going to work from.

It's not witchcraft, it's death by data, like everything else nowadays.

georgeyboy12345

3,950 posts

51 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
richhead said:
georgeyboy12345 said:
No, my neighbour has a Lexus RX450h and I drive a diesel Range Rover Evoque.
Wild guess but this is more likely why your quote was higher.
biggrin