Donate to Remove ads

Got a credit card? use our Credit Card & Finance Calculators

Thanks to Rhyd6,eyeball08,Wondergirly,bofh,johnstevens77, for Donating to support the site

Insurance for provisional licence holders

Passion, instruction, buying, care, maintenance and more, any form of vehicle discussion is welcome here
jockblue
Posts: 17
Joined: November 15th, 2016, 10:56 am
Has thanked: 5 times
Been thanked: 3 times

Insurance for provisional licence holders

#517337

Postby jockblue » July 26th, 2022, 1:33 pm

Hello Lemonfools - long time no post....

DAK a good way of insuring Son 1 (aged 22) and Son 2 (aged 17) on their mother's car whilst they are learning to drive. The blessed Aviva want about £800 for one son, and refuse to insure the under 21 year old. Whilst I know the cost of insuring the pair of them will be steep when they've passed, I always thought it was relatively cheap to insure whilst they were learning (and someone else was in the car with them)

Any suggestions?
jb

bungeejumper
Lemon Half
Posts: 8142
Joined: November 8th, 2016, 2:30 pm
Has thanked: 2893 times
Been thanked: 3984 times

Re: Insurance for provisional licence holders

#517345

Postby bungeejumper » July 26th, 2022, 2:09 pm

Calling Didds...... :) (The house expert on these matters, it seems)

What's the car?

BJ

jockblue
Posts: 17
Joined: November 15th, 2016, 10:56 am
Has thanked: 5 times
Been thanked: 3 times

Re: Insurance for provisional licence holders

#517359

Postby jockblue » July 26th, 2022, 2:59 pm

Its a Dacia Sondero. £230 for me and Mrs jb to drive it, over £1000 to add Son 1 on a prov licence....

bungeejumper
Lemon Half
Posts: 8142
Joined: November 8th, 2016, 2:30 pm
Has thanked: 2893 times
Been thanked: 3984 times

Re: Insurance for provisional licence holders

#517362

Postby bungeejumper » July 26th, 2022, 3:25 pm

I daresay there are specialist insurers who operate in this sort of territory. It's been a long time since I negotiated cover for my two daughters, so 'm well out of date, but I imagine that it's only the actors who've changed over the years, not the basic plot.

Get thee to a proper insurance broker, somebody who can argue your case and hopefully get the insurers competing for your business. It's what we always do for our business insurance needs. :)

BJ

Dod101
The full Lemon
Posts: 16629
Joined: October 10th, 2017, 11:33 am
Has thanked: 4343 times
Been thanked: 7535 times

Re: Insurance for provisional licence holders

#517364

Postby Dod101 » July 26th, 2022, 3:28 pm

jockblue wrote:Its a Dacia Sondero. £230 for me and Mrs jb to drive it, over £1000 to add Son 1 on a prov licence....


I would phone around and I am pretty sure that some will insure the sons for much less than the numbers quoted if you accept the 'black box' which monitors speed and so on. At least that was the experience of my daughter with the two grandchildren of much the same age, younger in fact because they both passed their test before they were 18.

Dod

redsturgeon
Lemon Half
Posts: 8959
Joined: November 4th, 2016, 9:06 am
Has thanked: 1322 times
Been thanked: 3693 times

Re: Insurance for provisional licence holders

#517391

Postby redsturgeon » July 26th, 2022, 4:42 pm

With my own children I found it was relatively cheap to insure them while they were learning to drive but the rates went up massively once they had passed their tests. I was with LVE at the time.

John

pje16
Lemon Half
Posts: 6050
Joined: May 30th, 2021, 6:01 pm
Has thanked: 1843 times
Been thanked: 2067 times

Re: Insurance for provisional licence holders

#517392

Postby pje16 » July 26th, 2022, 4:43 pm


airbus330
Lemon Slice
Posts: 568
Joined: December 1st, 2018, 3:55 pm
Has thanked: 370 times
Been thanked: 293 times

Re: Insurance for provisional licence holders

#517545

Postby airbus330 » July 27th, 2022, 9:30 am

In that situation a few years back. Used Top-up policy which stands alone but piggybacks onto the existing drivers insurance. The existing driver policy is protected from claims should the learner have an accident. The link below explains, but other insurers do them. https://www.collingwood.co.uk/learner-driver-insurance/

bungeejumper
Lemon Half
Posts: 8142
Joined: November 8th, 2016, 2:30 pm
Has thanked: 2893 times
Been thanked: 3984 times

Re: Insurance for provisional licence holders

#517558

Postby bungeejumper » July 27th, 2022, 10:00 am

airbus330 wrote:Used Top-up policy which stands alone but piggybacks onto the existing drivers insurance. The existing driver policy is protected from claims should the learner have an accident. The link below explains, but other insurers do them.

Thanks, you've just solved a mystery. :D The other week, I was shopping for some short-term comprehensive cover that would allow me to drive my daughter's Group 32 car for a couple of journeys. (My original query on this forum was at viewtopic.php?f=58&t=34217 .)

What I found was that the going rate for 24 hours was around £25, but it dropped as low as £8 a day if I could give them the name of my daughter's insurance company. For practical reasons I couldn't do that, because she was away at the time, so I paid the £25, but now I have an explanation for the price differential.

Somehow it doesn't quite stack up that the car owner's insurance wouldn't be hurt at all by a claim if the learner (or borrower) should have an accident. (Because dammit, the additional risk to the insurer has to be compensated somehow!) But the next time I'm looking for short-term cover, I might want to investigate that possibility again. Thanks again!

Would I use a top-up policy to cover somebody who wanted to test-drive a car that I was selling? Nope, because I wouldn't know anything about the stranger. But would I have used it to cover my nephew, who overturned his granny's car within half a mile of leaving his house? Probably - he's a nice sensible kid - or so I'd have thought...... ;)

BJ

didds
Lemon Half
Posts: 5298
Joined: November 4th, 2016, 12:04 pm
Has thanked: 3291 times
Been thanked: 1030 times

Re: Insurance for provisional licence holders

#517571

Postby didds » July 27th, 2022, 10:22 am

bungeejumper wrote:Calling Didds...... :) (The house expert on these matters, it seems)

What's the car?

BJ



bless ya!

I sympathise with the OP. However our "kids" had their own cars to insure under their own names - for various reasons not least being gaining NPD as early as possible, and those cars were small, underpowered etc. the most amazing was a Daewoo Matiz 800cc engine that uincredibly for a 17 year old was under £500 a year!

Otherwise my only advice is shop around. The insurance industry is a rule unto itself... Our 25 year old son we cannot get onto out VWT5 campervan insurance as he is "too young" despite him driving substantially larger vans/small rigid lorries for years for work.

jockblue
Posts: 17
Joined: November 15th, 2016, 10:56 am
Has thanked: 5 times
Been thanked: 3 times

Re: Insurance for provisional licence holders

#517637

Postby jockblue » July 27th, 2022, 1:41 pm

Thanks all - a few alternatives to chase down. Someone else has mentioned Marmalade.com as a possibility - they seem to specialise in learner driver insurance.

airbus330
Lemon Slice
Posts: 568
Joined: December 1st, 2018, 3:55 pm
Has thanked: 370 times
Been thanked: 293 times

Re: Insurance for provisional licence holders

#517640

Postby airbus330 » July 27th, 2022, 1:49 pm

bungeejumper wrote:
Somehow it doesn't quite stack up that the car owner's insurance wouldn't be hurt at all by a claim if the learner (or borrower) should have an accident. (Because dammit, the additional risk to the insurer has to be compensated somehow!) But the next time I'm looking for short-term cover, I might want to investigate that possibility again. Thanks again!



BJ


I think the answer to this is in 2 parts. The Learner top up policy stands alone and carries the learner drivers name and the specific car, any claim is made only on that policy. One of the terms of the policy is that an active standard car policy is in force. Without one, the top up policy is void. Even if the underlying policy holder is in the car when an accident occurs, they were not the driver, so the underlying policy need not be informed of the accident.
Secondly, because the Top up policy holder can only drive the car when accompanied by an experienced (there is a definition for this) co-driver, the loss adjusters believe, correctly, that the chances of there being an accident is low.
This is how an insurer explained it to me, but what they couldn't answer is the liability issue if the co-driver either actively encouraged or allowed irresponsible driving. This was an issue for us as my qualified older child sometimes went out with the Learner younger one for practice. Thankfully they were sensible, or if they were not never told me!


Return to “Cars, Driving, Motorbikes or any Transport”

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 11 guests