waue1978 wrote:But the car itself would still be insured by 2 different companies.
So are my dad's and friends' cars when I completely legally drive them under the provision of one of my policies which both give me cover to drive any otherwise insured vehicle with the owner's permission as long as it's in compliance with the law...
But to be honest it seems like a fairly moot point as it will more than likely cost a lot more to have the 2 policies running on the same car than you would benefit by the extra bit of no claims you earn on the policy on the Golf.
Doubtful. The cost of getting a learner driver added to my insurance would probably be about £2000/year, plus the £600 excess per claim, plus the £250 I would have saved next year when having 1 year NCB on it
Versus £95/month for a couple of months
Insurance companies like to use ANY excuse to get out of paying out & no doubt if you had an accident while loaded up with servers on a 1 day policy, that company would refuse to pay out as there was already another party insuring it
Nope, the T&Cs are surprisingly clear on what is and isn't allowed... It would be a very easy court case if they didn't cough up - they'd WANT you to get your money otherwise their entire business would be rendered invalid.
Besides, if you can't have 2 lots of insurance running on any car, you can't test drive a car without the owner adding you to
their insurance, and you can't drive it home until you've heard the owner cancelling their policy!
Heck, if that were the case I would be legally unable to drive any car I own because both of my policies (for the Golf and 406) say I can drive any otherwise insured car, which would also cover my own, so I'd always be driving under 2 sets of insurance...
You'd also prevent yourself from legally driving for a year if you accidentally managed to buy yourself 2 policies on the same car and didn't realise
As far as your main insurer would be concerned, if you use your car for business use just 1 day out of the year it should be on your policy & they should get their pot of gold for it.
It is on my policy. My day policy. Nothing to do with my annual policy. If I get into a crash while on business, my insurer is the day insurer, NOT my main insurer. If I have an accident my main insurer doesn't need to know about it because I'm not driving on their insurance. Likewise if I take a car on a race track and trash it or a third party, it's nothing to do with my insurers. Unless I bought a track policy.
EDIT:
(from another thread)
BTW, just tried a quote for my OH on that marmalade thing & it said £245 for 3 months! Don't know if they've done it cheaper because she's 40 or bumped it up because she's blonde AND Irish, but seems like a lot of money to me.
It's a flat rate based on postcode, and will still be a hell of a lot cheaper than mainstream insurance policy. The £1500-£2000/year quotes I put above were from the main comparison sites, and for a 30 year old on her provisional.
<steve_earwig> I think this forum is more about keeping our cars going with minimal outlay than giving our cars more reason to go bang