I can say that car insurance is very, very expensive in the US.
A son ran a Porsche & a 3 series in the UK - £550-£600 . year (5 years ago)
He now runs a Panamera and an X5 in the Texas - ~ £2,500 every 6 months! So in the region of £4,000 per year - 5 years ago he was paying less than he is now but thought matters would improve when he got a US Licence.and he had a US driving history.
NO! - the premiums keep on moving up.
As a comparison in today's prices his twin brother pays about £640 a year in Scotland for 2 comparable cars..
In the UK, it very much depends on where you live, if you are in a high risk age group or not and your previous claims history. When I was looking to replace my Mazda3 1.6 N/A (105PS) petrol (still got it) back in early 2017, I looked at buying a nearly new Scirocco 2.0 (180PS) Petrol GT, and all that would've done is raise my annual premium from about £275 to £300.
I regularly hear of under 30s and especially under 25s having to shell out £2k+ for essentially averagely-powered cars. I even took my dad off my insurance policy as an (emergency) named driver (and adde my sister on instead) because it increased my premium by £25 because he's over 70 and his risk profile is presumably going up again.
Besides the increase in 'crash for cash' indidents, I think the main rise in premiums or in some cases no reduction is due to:
1. Keyless entry systems being far less secure than the previous key-and-blipper system;
2. A greatly increased amount of tech in cars, both in the cabin and engine-related. Apart from the huge increase in thefts of CATs from certain types/brands of car, most of the icnrease here is because parts themselves are less modular, e.g. LED light clusters, and cost a small fortune to replace. Many parts are also physically difficult/time-consuming to replace as well.
3. Insurance firms STILL (despite government intervention) appear, IMHO, to be employing the services of dodgy 'claims management' firms and passing on details from screenscraper websites as well.
They also encourage using expensive hire car schemes and let claims drag on, especially as they mostly insist on having repairs doen through their 'partners' (who often aren't any good at crash repairs) even when reputable independent specialists or main dealer repairers local to the car owner can do the work sooner, for a lower price and quite often to better standards.
4. An increasing number of people driving on the roads are doing so without licences and/or insurance etc, sometimes driving stolen cars or with cloned plates to avoid getting caught.
In my view, a lot of the dodgy goings-on increasing invloves foreign criminal gangs who appear to be untouchable as regards the Police. Similar for the more British-borne dodgy claims management/ambulance chaser firms who run rings around the law by folding every time they get caught, avoiding any penalties and starting up again under another name.
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