Lost 9 Years NCB!

Don't some insurers offer introductory NCD though as long as you have been on a policy or driving a company car etc.? I'm not sure of the full conditions for it being offered but it is worth looking into that IMO.
 
Thank you :)

No wonder theres so many uninsured drivers on the roads, the honest ones get shafted more than the dishonest.

With all due respect, and I'm sure you didn't do this, but it's people not reading T&Cs that then ring up and make people such as myselves' day a misery by arguing and shouting.

Of course if you politely said okay, this doesn't apply to you.

Everyone else that rings up a call centre and argues because they can't read needs to be shot!
 
I have two plans of attack;

i) Ring Directline again and beg...reminding them they had 9 years of my custom. I'll spea to a manger if I have to.

ii) Use a different insurance company, tell them I have 9 years and hope they dont ask for written confirmation ( :eek: )

They will ask for confirmation

Plan i of ringing and begging around various insurers to see who will accept some or all of your old NCB is the next step.
 
In response to everyone's contribution to this thread, thought I would resurrect it.

I'll be looking to buy a car between now and spring (for the curious, either an E46 M3 or a 2006 Hawkeye Impreza STI).

I've spoken to Directline.

• My policy ended 16th August 2009.
• Direct-line would honour 6 years of NCB, though that would only extend to August of this year. I.e. a 3 year window.
• They are going to send me out certification of 6 years NCB in the post, though they can’t confirm if other insurers would accept it as well as Directline (some only honour a 2 year window)

Although I rightly have more than 10 years NCB, I'll happily take 6!

Out of interest, I'm 30 in February, can I expect sudden decrease in insurance as I've hit the big 3-0 or is that a myth?
 
In response to everyone's contribution to this thread, thought I would resurrect it.

I'll be looking to buy a car between now and spring (for the curious, either an E46 M3 or a 2006 Hawkeye Impreza STI).

I've spoken to Directline.

• My policy ended 16th August 2009.
• Direct-line would honour 6 years of NCB, though that would only extend to August of this year. I.e. a 3 year window.
• They are going to send me out certification of 6 years NCB in the post, though they can’t confirm if other insurers would accept it as well as Directline (some only honour a 2 year window)

Although I rightly have more than 10 years NCB, I'll happily take 6!

Out of interest, I'm 30 in February, can I expect sudden decrease in insurance as I've hit the big 3-0 or is that a myth?


myth I'd guess. Although, I am paying the same as last year, with a SP50 and other factors added in, so maybe it did decrease a bit.
 
Hardly. Loss of NCB will increase your premiums, but they will be nowhere near the amount you would pay at 18.

Indeed, the difference isn't going to be a more than a few hundred quid. Which, if you're thinking about crazy money-pit cars like the Evo or Scoob, shouldn't be an issue.
 
Depends some brokers will allow this as A Plan did it when I lost 14 years worth when I had a company car for 3 years and then went to the car allowance. They asked for a letter from my work stating I'd still be driving and insured and also the previous insurer.

I was in the same situation, one insurer said bugger off, the other said get written proof and you are fine... (obviously I went with the latter offer)
 
To be honest if you have clean driving record and are not young it may not make that much difference.

I ran a few quotes last week. 400 pounds with 3 years NCB or 500 +/- without any.
 
Just got some quotes.

2005 E46 M3 @ £899
2006 Impreza STI @ £780

It was £1200 for an M3 when I checked lasty year. Well pleased!
 
Sucks to lose all them now claims, not so bad when you get a little older though

Surprised nobody picked up on the fact he admits to fronting in the OP.
 
Got 2 sets of full no claims ATM have to switch them out every year to keep them both valid
 
Having someone on your ins as a named driver to bring down the cost IIRC

Oh right.

We'll on my new policy, yes I've added my partner as a named driver but she will be genuinely using the car.

In my original post, I think it's been misunderstood. The car I currently drive, is my Father-in-laws, he is the policy holder and I'm on as a named driver.
 
This happened to me in 2004, but, I bought a stupidly cheap car, rarely used it, and paid the crappy £150 a year to insure it, just so I wouldn't loose my no claims.
 
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