The Scottish Mail on Sunday

DRIVE DOWN CAR COVER

Comparison websites make it easy to find cheaper cover – but there’s more you can do to cut premiums

- By Toby Walne

SHOPPING around for the best car insurance deal is the simplest way to cut costs. But there are even more smart ways to slash premiums. The Mail on Sunday looks at a range of often unusual ideas to get cheaper cover.

USE A DASH–CAM

THE dashboard camera – or ‘dashcam’ – can cut your insurance premiums by up to 10 per cent.

The camera – no bigger than a satnav – is typically attached to the windscreen behind the rear view mirror using a suction pad. It records what is going on in front of your car and can be used to help with claims, if you are involved in an accident that is not your fault.

Dash-cams can immediatel­y show exactly what happened and this saves your insurer money. The device typically costs between £100 and £200 and records on a one-hour loop. After a journey it goes back to the start.

Samantha Dunne, 27, an account manager from Southampto­n, paid £200 to have a dash-cam fitted to her Volkswagen Golf a couple of months ago after her Peugeot 306 was written off in an accident that was not her fault.

Samantha says: ‘Another motorist went into my car at a roundabout. Although the insurer eventually paid up it took five months of fighting as the driver did not want to admit liability. If a dash-cam had been fitted the case would have been clear-cut.’

Samantha was paying about £720 a year for motor insurance with Tesco Bank and after the accident she had to hand over a £350 excess, which was later returned. She now pays £576 a year with Admiral.

Stuart Humphreys, automotive manager at Halfords, which sells dashcam technology, says its research shows that one in five motorists involved in an accident face a rise in insurance premiums as a result of bogus or misleading informatio­n from unscrupulo­us drivers during the claims process.

‘Dash-cams can act as an independen­t witness to guard against this and put a stop to the unfair rises in insurance premiums,’ he says.

Roman Bryl, product manager at insurer Swiftcover, which lowers premiums for those with the dashboard camera, says: ‘Dash-cams can significan­tly improve supporting evidence for policyhold­ers and prove liability in disputed claims.

‘Motorists involved in an accident that is not their fault will save hundreds of pounds and benefit from lower insurance premiums.’

The market is still in its infancy but insurers that will take dash-cam technology into considerat­ion when calculatin­g premiums include Swiftcover and Adrian Flux.

Even if your insurer does not take the technology into account in cutting premiums it could still save you a fortune in a disputed claim.

The RAC launches its own dash-cam in June. It found that a third of motorists would consider installing one because of fears of false ‘crash for cash’ whiplash claims made by other motorists.

GET A BIG BROTHER

A HIGH-TECH telematics black box fitted to your car can cut annual insurance premiums by up to 25 per cent.

This ‘big brother’ device fits neatly under the dashboard or steering wheel and records where you are going, your speed and sudden movements made by the car.

It is particular­ly attractive for young drivers, who otherwise face steep premiums. But although 15 per cent of insurance policies now offer a black box option, less than a million of the 35 million motorists in Britain have opted for one – preferring to pay extra for the freedom of not having an electronic back seat driver.

Hannah Woolley, 22, of Chipping Sodbury, Gloucester­shire, installed a plug-in black box sent free in the post by insurer Direct Line last year to cut the cost of insurance for her Vauxhall Corsa from £340 to £259 a year.

The teaching assistant says: ‘I was a bit worried before fitting the box and thought it might restrict when I could drive but it has not changed my driv- ing habits at all. Fortunatel­y I stick to the speed limit and am a fairly safe driver anyway. If you have nothing to fear from the way you drive there is nothing to lose and it is an easy way to save money.’

Hannah says it even saved her £60 after she was given a fine at a Tesco car park. By providing the telematics informatio­n she could prove she had not parked the car in the supermarke­t all day as initially claimed.

The box, which some insurers may charge to have installed and removed, not only monitors if you are breaking speed limits and driving erraticall­y but can also keep tabs of when you are on the road – with some insurers imposing a curfew to prevent ‘highrisk’ late-night drives.

GO BACK TO SCHOOL

PASSING your driving test is just the start of learning how to drive well. The Institute of Advanced Motorists offers membership to its charity associatio­n for a year from £32.

It offers a Skills for Life course that can help prepare you for an Advanced Driving Test.

Insurers recognise the benefits of tutoring from a skilled instructor and many offer cheaper motor insurance.

Shannon Hall, 23, of Crowboroug­h in East Sussex, was given Skills for Life lessons as a 21st birthday present by her family. She found that her motor insurance quotes fell from more than £700 a year to £540 for her second-hand Peugeot 206.

Shannon says: ‘Membership opened my eyes to better driving – it was not about pottering along but having greater control behind the wheel.’

Shannon has since traded in her Peugeot for a specially adapted Vauxhall Zafira Tourer after being diagnosed with hypermobil­ity syndrome, which requires foot pedal controls to be adapted so she can drive using only her hands. Shannon, secretary of the East Sussex Group of Advanced Motorists, says: ‘I was told I could not have had the car without having the advanced motoring skills.’

Motorists can also take a Pass Plus driving test as approved by the Government-backed Driver and Vehicle Standards Agency.

From as little as £110 you can get six hours of practical training to improve your skills. Premiums can be cut by up to a third with advanced motoring lessons but not all insurers recognise their benefits.

 ??  ?? SAFE: Hannah Woolley has a telematics box
SAFE: Hannah Woolley has a telematics box
 ?? N O S L I W S E L : E R U T C I P ?? DINKY CARS: Andy Carter with some of
his classics
N O S L I W S E L : E R U T C I P DINKY CARS: Andy Carter with some of his classics
 ??  ?? IN GEAR: Samantha Dunne has a dash-cam to act as a witness, while Shannon Hall, left, is an advanced driver
IN GEAR: Samantha Dunne has a dash-cam to act as a witness, while Shannon Hall, left, is an advanced driver

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