I had a rear end shunt a few years ago. My insurance company was Direct Line. The other party's was LV.
Within 2 hours of the shunt, LV phoned me admitting liability and offering to take care of everything themselves as well as supplying a loan car.
I decided to claim via Direct Line though. The reasons were:
- I had a contract with Direct Line, and felt I had protection if anything went wrong in the process.
- Going through Direct Line meant a had a five year guarantee on the repairs.
- I knew I had a guaranteed small and basic courtesy car for the duration of the repairs.
- Even if I had dealt directly with LV, I would still have to declare the non-fault claim to my insurers (for the following 5 years).
Direct Line tried to persuade me to opt for a larger courtesy car (Fiesta sized, as that was similar to what I had), as they could claim the cost back from the other party. I rejected this offer, as it sounded like a credit hire agreement. I was worried, if things went wrong, I would get stung with the cost of this.
As it turned out Direct Line's car hire company didn't have any small basic cars, so ended up with a Fiesta anyway. I had the hire car for a month.
I didn't have to pay the excesses, the insurance companies sorted this out between themselves.
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