The Post

Discounted premiums won’t last

-

Consumers shopping for insurance are being told to ask what their premiums might be in future years – not just the first year quoted.

Insurance expert Michael Naylor, of Massey University, said it was common for insurers to advertise a discounted first-year premium, which would then rise.

He said internatio­nal research has shown that led to ‘‘disgruntle­ment’’ after about five years and cancellati­on after seven.

‘‘Given that New Zealand’s unusually high up-front [adviser] commission­s mean that insurers don’t tend to make back the cost of client acquisitio­n before the six or seven-year mark, it is a major industry issue.’’

Online insurance sites offer cashbacks and discounts of up to 30 per cent in the first year of a policy. Insurers themselves sometimes discount first-year premiums by about 10 per cent.

Naomi Ballantyne, managing director of Partners Life, said the problem was that when discountin­g came off, it meant a significan­t jump in price.

‘‘This can result in a seemingly cheap premium in year one and then a substantia­l increase in a future year when the client ticks over into an age that the company believes represents significan­tly higher risk,’’ she said.

Industry commentato­r Russell Hutchinson, of Chatswood Consulting, said as people aged it became harder to shift to a new insurer.

‘‘I have pre-existing conditions; the terms offered by a new insurer are almost certain to be worse than my current insurer . . . As everyone gets older, that’s true for more and more people.’’

Susan Edmunds

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand