Minor bump and car insurance
Minor bump and car insurance
Author
Discussion

325iMSport

Original Poster:

343 posts

190 months

Thursday 21st October 2010
quotequote all
Whilst parked, a car hit mine and there is a scuff mark on the rear bumper. The other driver says he will pay me for the damage if its not too much or will go through the insurance if its costly.

Question is, will me future insurance be affected even though its not my fault and he has admitted this? I was told that i have to declare any claims made regardless of fault. I have just looked at a few insurance company quote websites and it does ask you if the claim was your fault or not. So will it affect me?



ZOLLAR

19,920 posts

196 months

Thursday 21st October 2010
quotequote all
325iMSport said:
Whilst parked, a car hit mine and there is a scuff mark on the rear bumper. The other driver says he will pay me for the damage if its not too much or will go through the insurance if its costly.

Question is, will me future insurance be affected even though its not my fault and he has admitted this? I was told that i have to declare any claims made regardless of fault. I have just looked at a few insurance company quote websites and it does ask you if the claim was your fault or not. So will it affect me?
Unfotunately its likely to affect yours premiums for the next 3-5 years (depending on the insurer), reason being is that insurance statistcal data can show that somebody involved in any sort of incident regardless of fault tends to be a higher risk than somebody who has never been involved in an incident.

HTH

RedAlfa

480 posts

207 months

Thursday 21st October 2010
quotequote all
325iMSport said:
Whilst parked, a car hit mine and there is a scuff mark on the rear bumper. The other driver says he will pay me for the damage if its not too much or will go through the insurance if its costly.

Question is, will me future insurance be affected even though its not my fault and he has admitted this? I was told that i have to declare any claims made regardless of fault. I have just looked at a few insurance company quote websites and it does ask you if the claim was your fault or not. So will it affect me?
Any incident can increase your premium, even if it wasn't your fault. If you were involved in four non-fault accidents in a year, your insurer would regard you as a higher risk frown



Edited by RedAlfa on Thursday 21st October 21:56

325iMSport

Original Poster:

343 posts

190 months

Thursday 21st October 2010
quotequote all
Thanks

325iMSport

Original Poster:

343 posts

190 months

Thursday 21st October 2010
quotequote all
Also, will the other driver have to pay the excess on his insurance?

Edited by 325iMSport on Thursday 21st October 22:45

Deva Link

26,934 posts

268 months

Thursday 21st October 2010
quotequote all
325iMSport said:
Also, will the other driver have to pay the excess on his insurance?
Only if he claims for damage to his own car.

325iMSport

Original Poster:

343 posts

190 months

Thursday 21st October 2010
quotequote all
Ok, I don't think he will as mine was much worse than his.

So in this situation, no one pays the excess? And how do I go about getting it sorted through his insurance?

Deva Link

26,934 posts

268 months

Friday 22nd October 2010
quotequote all
'Phone them and say you want to claim.

What I would (and have done) do is to claim on my own insurance and let them sort it out. In my view, that's what fully comp insurance is for.
Others on here disagree though, for reasons which aren't clear to me. I think it depends on how good or bad your insurance company is.

madala

5,063 posts

221 months

Friday 22nd October 2010
quotequote all
RedAlfa said:
325iMSport said:
Whilst parked, a car hit mine and there is a scuff mark on the rear bumper. The other driver says he will pay me for the damage if its not too much or will go through the insurance if its costly.

Question is, will me future insurance be affected even though its not my fault and he has admitted this? I was told that i have to declare any claims made regardless of fault. I have just looked at a few insurance company quote websites and it does ask you if the claim was your fault or not. So will it affect me?
Any incident can increase your premium, even if it wasn't your fault. If you were involved in four non-fault accidents in a year, your insurer would regard you as a higher risk frown



Edited by RedAlfa on Thursday 21st October 21:56
....yeah tell me about it....thieving coniving b'stards the lot of them.....frown

itz_baseline

827 posts

244 months

Friday 22nd October 2010
quotequote all
madala said:
RedAlfa said:
325iMSport said:
Whilst parked, a car hit mine and there is a scuff mark on the rear bumper. The other driver says he will pay me for the damage if its not too much or will go through the insurance if its costly.

Question is, will me future insurance be affected even though its not my fault and he has admitted this? I was told that i have to declare any claims made regardless of fault. I have just looked at a few insurance company quote websites and it does ask you if the claim was your fault or not. So will it affect me?
Any incident can increase your premium, even if it wasn't your fault. If you were involved in four non-fault accidents in a year, your insurer would regard you as a higher risk frown



Edited by RedAlfa on Thursday 21st October 21:56
....yeah tell me about it....thieving coniving b'stards the lot of them.....frown
Why are they thieving? An insurance company just goes on statistics. If the car was bumped in a car park, there a chance it was a car park involving tight spaces or generally just a tight car park. There also a chance that you'll regularly be parking in this car park and therefore your car is more likely to be damaged.....and one day it may be damaged and the other driver drives off meaning you will make a claim against your insurance.

My wife works in a supermarket where she parks every day. She tries to park as far away from the entrance as possible. So far her car has been bumped 7 times - we've never bothered getting any of them repaired, but we might have wanted to. Clearly we are much more likely to claim against her policy (even though non of them will be at fault) than against mine, where I work in a office that happens to have double sized parking spaces. Simples.

Jonny671

29,778 posts

212 months

Friday 22nd October 2010
quotequote all
325iMSport said:
Ok, I don't think he will as mine was much worse than his.

So in this situation, no one pays the excess? And how do I go about getting it sorted through his insurance?
No, it'll still put your insurance up even if you only go through his insurance.

It asks you when you take out insurance if you've had any claims, fault or no fault.. This will put it up.

Just get him to give you cash job done.

T84

6,941 posts

217 months

Friday 22nd October 2010
quotequote all
itz_baseline said:
My wife works in a supermarket where she parks every day. She tries to park as far away from the entrance as possible. So far her car has been bumped 7 times - we've never bothered getting any of them repaired, but we might have wanted to. Clearly we are much more likely to claim against her policy (even though non of them will be at fault) than against mine, where I work in a office that happens to have double sized parking spaces. Simples.
So you have 7 losses noted on your policy?

Edited by T84 on Friday 22 October 12:07

itz_baseline

827 posts

244 months

Friday 22nd October 2010
quotequote all
T84 said:
itz_baseline said:
My wife works in a supermarket where she parks every day. She tries to park as far away from the entrance as possible. So far her car has been bumped 7 times - we've never bothered getting any of them repaired, but we might have wanted to. Clearly we are much more likely to claim against her policy (even though non of them will be at fault) than against mine, where I work in a office that happens to have double sized parking spaces. Simples.
So you have 7 losses noted on your policy?

Edited by T84 on Friday 22 October 12:07
No, we've never taken any of them through the insurance because of the reason that premiums will increase even if they are non fault.

My point is, if you make a claim in a car park (even if it's not your fault), you are more likely to have another claim, hence your premium increases

Chiswickboy

549 posts

211 months

Friday 22nd October 2010
quotequote all


[/quote]

....yeah tell me about it....thieving coniving b'stards the lot of them.....frown
[/quote]

Why are they thieving? An insurance company just goes on statistics. If the car was bumped in a car park, there a chance it was a car park involving tight spaces or generally just a tight car park.
[/quote]

"There are lies, dammed lies and statistics" -- Winston S Churchill.

Yes, there is a chance that a car park involves tight spaces but this is assumption in any specific case without the insurer having the dimensions.

An insurance policy is "a contract of good faith". It is up to the insured to advise the insurer of any "fact" that may affect the risk. If you have had seven "bumps" in a car park that you regularly use then you should advise your insurer so that they are aware of the risk and can make any adjustment to the premium they feel necessary. By not advising them you are technically invalidating your insurance and they have the legal right to cancel.