Soldato
At a guess, you'll be paying off some of the remainder of the policy and a cancellation fee.
At a guess, you'll be paying off some of the remainder of the policy and a cancellation fee.
So there's no point in cancelling?
No idea, not my policy.
There is because if you leave it running and the new owner then has to make a claim you end up in a real mess of insurers fighting over payouts.So there's no point in cancelling?
This isn't always an option if the value of the cars in question is vastly different due to the restrictions in place by the underwriter. I've had to cancel insurance before when going from a shed to something much nicer. I agree the cancellation 'paperwork' charge is BS, though.I would either transfer it to your new car.
Agreed, when I first took out my policy they were great, added a few things to the policy a couple of months in, no problem, no charges, couldn’t have been more helpful.To be fair, Adrian Flux have really gone down the toilet in recent years. It used to be the place for anything even slightly tasty. One of my cars is still insured with them but I'm unlikely to renew.
There is because if you leave it running and the new owner then has to make a claim you end up in a real mess of insurers fighting over payouts.
https://www.rac.co.uk/forum/showthr...insurance-left-running-now-a-claim-against-meWhy? Your policy has nothing to do with a new owner, why would they even know about your policy?
Why? Your policy has nothing to do with a new owner, why would they even know about your policy?
Why? Your policy has nothing to do with a new owner, why would they even know about your policy?
Just an update.
I left them a 1* review on TrustPilot and got a phone call the next day. They reduced it to £46.50.
i got charged nothing once because they wouldn't insure me on the new car i'd bought.
so they refunded me and i went elsewhere. however your NCB gets reset. as in lets say you are 4 years and 9 months in to the policy. it gets reset to 4 years NCB. it may therefore be more beneficial to just leave it and accumulate the 5 years.
Rather than the new owner claiming, probably meant a third party running your numberplate.
If a policy is sold on the basis you're the legal owner, and you sell the car, wouldn't that make the policy void anyway?