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Which is in my reply you quoted
On my second lager out of the ice bucket. Frosted..... nliss
I think you've now lost yourself and lost count of the lagers too.
Which is in my reply you quoted
On my second lager out of the ice bucket. Frosted..... nliss
Now read what I have written in the context of the scenario where the named driver may live at the other end of the country and is being put on the insurance to lower the insurance of a new to be insured driver who faces a very large premium. Now put that into the mix and ask what possible benefit to either side of that "named" driver gives to the risk Assessment?
When you add the named driver then you need to disclose details about them INCLUDING THEIR ADDRESS. If the insurance company have an issue with this being a long way from the primary driver then they will refuse to accept them as a named driver.
If they accept the details given then it forms part of the insurance contract and everyone is happy.
It's the Newcastle Brown for me tonight - cheers!![]()
Definitely worth shopping around and trying all the comparison sites, even if your last quote seems reasonable. It could be that the insurance co have had a number of claims for a particular area, so your particular postcode then becomes undesirable in their eyes and the premiums go up.
I'm lucky enough to be an old geezer and qualify for Saga car insurance. Mucho cheapo renewal quote this year, £100 cheaper than Direct Line, who were already cheap for me![]()
She might find that if she tells her insurers that her past year's driving experience is that little that her premium goes up a bit.
But on the other hand I bet they wouldn't reduce my premium if I told them I've drove a good (35-40%) proportion of the miles done by my parents cars in the 3 years since I passed my test, and have had no incidents......
It just all seems a con, but a con I'm going to have to go along with unfortunately.