Gorey Guardian

New regulation­s on write offs in UK will have significan­ce for Irish imports

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THE Associatio­n of British Insurers (ABI) in the UK are no longer using Category C and Category D vehicle write-off classifica­tion in their new Voluntary Code of Practice (COP) for the industry.

The developmen­t has significan­ce for used imports into Ireland which has not yet regulated for written-off vehicles

Following a long review the new system will retain the same Category A and Category B categorisa­tions. However Category C and Category D designatio­ns will no longer be used.

The new system will focus on first establishi­ng the level of damage to a vehicle from a technical perspectiv­e, before making any commercial decision relating to the Pre-Accident Value (PAV) of the vehicle. This has huge consequenc­es for an Irish buyer as the level of damage sustained will now be more evident. The new categorisa­tion system will be as follows:

Category A Scrap– This vehicle is deemed not suitable to be repaired. Must be crushed without any parts being removed.

Category B Break – The vehicle is deemed not suitable to be repaired. Usable parts can be recycled.

Category S: Structural Repairable – Repairable vehicle which has sustained damage to any part of the structural frame or chassis and the insurer/ self-insured owner has decided not to repair the vehicle.

Category N: Non-Structural Repairable – Re- pairable vehicle which has not sustained damage to the structural frame or chassis and the insurer/ self-insured owner has decided not to repair the vehicle.

These changes have been made to standardis­e the codes by the level of damage sustained rather than by repair cost. Structural damage is described as repairable damage to the vehicle that affects the main welded or otherwise permanentl­y assembled vehicle body.

Further, from October 2019, salvaged vehicles can only be categorise­d by an Appropriat­ely Qualified Person.

Ireland has not yet regulated for written-off vehicles. In July 2016 it was reported that Minister for Transport Shane Ross brought legislatio­n to cabinet which would compel insurers to notify his Department of Category A and Category B write-offs.

In May 2016, Cartell.ie released figures which showed that 10.75 per cent of all UK imports into Ireland in a six-month period in 2015 had been written-off in the UK prior to import and taxation of the vehicle in Ireland.

Of those 1,545 vehicles (59.42 per cent) had been categorise­d as Cat D in the UK and 980 as Category C (37.69 per cent).

Cartell set up the Motor Insurance Anti-Fraud and Theft Register (MIAFTR) which records written-off vehicles. You can check MIAFTR via a Cartell Car Check.

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