The Scotsman

Drive needed to uncover multi-car deals

Insurance can be a minefield if you have more than one vehicle in the household and want to save cash

- Martin Lewis is the founder and chair of Moneysavin­gexpert.com. To join the 12 million people who get his free Money Tips weekly email, go to www.moneysavin­gexpert.com/latesttip

If you have two or more cars in your household, you may be able to save £1,000s using a multicar policy… then again doing that may leave you paying £1,000s over the odds. Frustratin­g, isn’t it? There’s no law as to when it’s cheaper, but I have come up with a rule of thumb that can help.

Multi-car insurance really is Marmite. In a Facebook poll of 2,100 people I did recently, 40 per cent with more than one car said multi-car won for them, 60 per cent said separate policies did. And the difference­s can be startling.

On the “love it” side is bored with being ignored who wrote on my web forum: “Over three cars (incl our 18-yearold son’s), we saved £4,600 as our Multicar policy reduced it to a much more manageable £2,600. Thanks Moneysavin­gexpert.”

On the “hate it” side Suzanne emailed: “Husband had three cars on multi-car, followed your guide and bought three [separate] policies, saving £1,400.”

The simple rule of thumb is to get the opposite quotes to what you’ve already got first. If you’re at renewal and are in a household with more than one car, and you’ve got a multicar policy, then start by looking for the cheapest separate policies for each car. If you’ve got separate policies then start checking multi-car insurance.

Now this might not be as catchy a rule to remember as “don’t eat yellow snow” – but there is some logic behind it. This is because what tends to happen is multi-car newbies get hot offers to suck them in, then that advantage usually erodes at renewal.

Frustratin­gly, you can’t use comparison sites to do multi-car searches (some look like they do, but they just forward you to one insurer rather than doing a comparison). So instead, you have to do this manually as trial and error. Try as many of these as you can stomach . . .

Multi-car policies: Here all cars are on one policy. The big name in multi-car is www. admiral.com which would always be my start point, yet it’s not alone – both www.aviva.co.uk and www.lv.com are players in this area as well.

Multi-car discounts: Here you get a discount on the cost to insure each “additional” vehicle. There’s www. morethan.com (15 per cent), www.axa.co.uk (10 per cent), www.esure.com (10 per cent), www.priviledge.com (percentage varies) and www.sheilaswhe­els.com (10 per cent).

There are also a range of firms that in one way or another potentiall­y offer those with multiple cars discounts. Yet here the cars aren’t all in one policy. They are separate policies where you get a discount. Therefore, the easy way to do this is to use a comparison site (see below) for each car and just keep a note of these firms’ prices for each vehicle.

Plus as the discount is off each additional policy, insure the car with the cheapest premium first because you’ll usually get the discount on the next ‘additional’ (and subsequent) cars – and if they’re most expensive you save more. This can be especially useful, for example, if one car is for a young driver, and far more expensive than others.

multi-policy discounts. here the discount is for getting an additional policy. For example, it could be a car policy and a home policy, but two cars also counts. For this, try www. directline.com (which isn’t on comparison sites) and www. churchill.com – the discount varies.

There’s a whole art to getting cheap car insurance for individual cars including haggling, cashback sites, how to home into the perfect policy requiremen­ts and more. You can read my full guide to it at www.moneysavin­gexpert.com/carinsuran­ce or for under 25s at www.moneysavin­gexpert.com/youngdrive­rs.

Yet in brief, for each car, just use a comparison site for each vehicle. Yet as they don’t search identical insurers, and can have different prices for the same firm, it’s best to do a few checks for a wider spread. The current order to try (do as many as possible) is www. confused.com, www.moneysuper­market.com, www. gocompare.com and www. comparethe­market.com. If you’ve different cars in the home they may be up for renewal at separate times – which may make you think you can’t switch to a multi-car policy. Well don’t worry. The first thing to do is get a quote and see if it’s likely to be saving you substantia­l cash.

If you find it’s likely to be much cheaper, then provided you haven’t claimed (or reported an incident in that insurance year) on the policy that’s not at renewal since its last renewal, then for a £50ish admin fee you can normally cancel your policy, and get the rest of the year refunded (you won’t earn that year’s noclaims bonus) and switch to the deal.

 ??  ?? If your household has more than one vehicle, it is worth shopping around for a deal, either individual­ly or as a group policy but you need to use several comparison sites
If your household has more than one vehicle, it is worth shopping around for a deal, either individual­ly or as a group policy but you need to use several comparison sites
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom