Your Car Insurance Premium Is Not Only About Your Car

Autos & TrucksInsurance

  • Author Stephanie Andrew
  • Published September 27, 2010
  • Word count 644

What title do you ascribe to your job?. Are you a dustman or an

environmental hygiene technician?. A shop assistant (executive retail

consultant)? Are you a van driver or a logistics solutions provider? One can

only laugh at the recent reclassification of so many job titles. But

describing your occupation could save or lose you money when it comes to car

insurance.

People working in the licensed trade, members of the armed forces and

journalists are considered risky but less so than actors, TV presenters and

sports professionals. These people would find themselves receiving much

higher quotes than the average. Highly paid footballers and entertainers

will, naturally, drive expensive cars.

It's not generally known that car insurance premiums can vary according to

the job done by the applicant. If you travel to work each day in your car,

the insurers are likely to regard your occupation as a safe one. If a job

entails having a safe place in which to park your car, this will lead the

insurers to consider your job a safe one too.

Insurance companies will want to know everything they can about you; if you

are a smoker or drinker, married or single. Often a health check-up may

indicate that you are healthier than others in your age or occupation

bracket, so you could save money that way.

Another important factor determining the cost of some insurance products is

your postcode. It could be that a Bentley-driving person whose job,

lifestyle and place of residence are totally different from yours pays less

than you, a Fiesta driver.

Insurance companies also publish a list of high-risk, high-crime areas

around the country. Your postcode not only affects insurance but the price

you pay for a car warranty as

well. Bizarrely, some towns in the UK have areas in the 'A', low-risk

category as well as 'F', high-risk areas, but the majority are centred

around the B, C or D mid-risk range.

Some occupations with high and low risks, as far as insurers are concerned,

are surprising. Computer engineers and retail managers are near the top of

the list, accompanied by doctors and chefs, working long hours in stressful

jobs. Also among the top ten are, according to research by Churchill, estate

agents, students and social workers. At the other end of the scale, the

safest risks include farmers, green keepers and, reassuringly, pilots and

ambulance drivers.

Whether or not you can park your car in a garage or off-street will also be

taken into consideration. Young or new drivers will understandably pay more,

not only for car insurance but warranties and gap insurance as well.

Car insurance is usually more expensive for men than for women. People will

always argue about the contention that this suggests women are better

drivers. It's true that men and women are responsible for an equal number of

accidents, but women's accidents are generally less serious. Men pay higher

premiums because they are responsible for 85% of serious accidents.

In the world of publishing, premiums vary for different job descriptions.

Moneysavingexpert.com has a job description tweaking tool. In the world of

publishing, when someone describing themselves as a journalist pays £400 per

year, a reporter would pay £396 while a proof-reader would get away with

only paying £356. A journalist could legitimately describe himself as a

proof-reader as it's a necessary part of his job.

By calling yourself a shop manager instead of a shop assistant you would pay

less than the £500 the shop assistant would be charged. Drivers of coaches,

minibuses and buses are charged less than someone described as a van driver.

It is worth thinking carefully about aspects of your job and which best

describes you for insurance purposes. Don't risk invalidating your policy by

being less than honest, but equally don't deny yourself the chance of

reducing your premium by using the moneysavingexpert.com site.

When buying any vehicle, it's wise to consider the effects of

depreciation. Buying additional insurance products from online companies

such as Future 45 Ltd. can help UK motorists save money on their gap insurance, for example, by

buying direct from the insurer.

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