Sunderland Echo

One insurance claim can raise policy cost by 50%

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Home insurance customers who have made one claim face paying 57% or £91 more on average than those who have not claimed, according to analysis published by Which?

Those with no claims pay £161 on average while those who have made a claim can expect to pay around £252.

Those with two home insurance claims could expect to pay £359 on average – an increase of £198 compared with a policyhold­er who had made no claims.

This compared with an average increase of £69 for drivers who had made two recent car insurance claims. Motorists who had made two previous claims faced paying £955 for cover on average.

One reason for home insurance customers facing steeper price hikes for making a claim than car insurance customers could be the expenses involved in putting the situation right.

Among the home insurance claimants, the most commonly reported reasons for claiming were accidental loss or damage, escape of water and thefts – all of which could mean complex or costly replacemen­ts, or potential concerns about the security of the property.

The three most commonly reported car insurance claims were accidents where the driver was at fault but there were no injuries, “nonfault” accidents and singlevehi­cle accidents.

Which? was helped by comparison website GoCompare to look at averages of millions of quotes received by drivers and households using its service between January and August 2021.

GoCompare’s Ryan Fulthorpe, who aided Which? in their research, said: “Making a claim on a car and home insurance policy will almost certainly increase your premiums the following year. And having looked at the data, it shows that the more claims you make, the more it will impact the price you pay.”

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