TK4
Well-known member
Could it come to Ontario ? You betcha...
Why you should pay attention to Alberta’s insurance changes | Driving
Why you should pay attention to Alberta’s insurance changes | Driving
Hahahaha. Negotiating with a functional oligopoly. You're a funny guy Mike.They already collect and share a ton of info on all of us... (payment history, cancellations, accidents, claims, family relationships, credit reports/scores plus all that stuff they ask when you sign up. )
If letting them know how and where I drive help reduce my premiums... I’m in.
I would ask something in return, transparency. Insurers should make their actuarial data available for scrutiny.
We would need a hard right govt to get any effective change to insurance. The existing setup is a cartel, with provincial govts being one of the pigs at the trough.Hahahaha. Negotiating with a functional oligopoly. You're a funny guy Mike.
Its likely not going to reduce your premiums but simply increase them if the data suggests your "risky".They already collect and share a ton of info on all of us... (payment history, cancellations, accidents, claims, family relationships, credit reports/scores plus all that stuff they ask when you sign up. )
If letting them know how and where I drive help reduce my premiums... I’m in.
I would ask something in return, transparency. Insurers should make their actuarial data available for scrutiny.
And the upside to those changes is everybody is on the same side. Breaking the cartel is adversarial. Busting the crooks benefits everybody.If they really want to make improvements their time would be much better spent eliminating fraud etc
The status quo needs big changes. Towing, storage, bodyshops, crooked cops, doctors and clinics, staged accidents etc
This would reduce losses far more.
Yes, I did same tests with TD, I think it’s a gimmick, or at best brain dead. It penalizes you for moving with traffic that’s flowing faster than the speed limit, which is 5-20 over in any in congested area. My daughter bussed to school from Markham to St Mikes, bus drivers received a lower score than me.Its likely not going to reduce your premiums but simply increase them if the data suggests your "risky".
Have a co-worker who did a trial last year with a device. Drove like a grandmother for 8 months. In the end little to no savings.
Accelerate and brake at a snails pace to save ~$75 a year. Any abrupt accel or decel, even for a moment, knocks points off.
Im not so sure that driving under the limit is less risky than simply keeping up with the pace of traffic.
But doesn't fraud help make them money by justifying increases?? To me it's a "why bother" from them as its a win.If they really want to make improvements their time would be much better spent eliminating fraud etc
The status quo needs big changes. Towing, storage, bodyshops, crooked cops, doctors and clinics, staged accidents etc
This would reduce losses far more.
If you sign documentation stating the phone must be on you and you pull that stunt, they will cancel the policy.If this is done via a phone app, I get a burner phone, it gets installed on that, and that phone sits at home forgotten in a drawer but plugged in. No?
I dont think the insurance companies care much for pay as you drive. There are many primary and secondary vehicles that dont get driven much. These policies subsidize everyone else because we get dinged liability, accident benefits etc for each vehicle.Yes, I did same tests with TD, I think it’s a gimmick, or at best brain dead. It penalizes you for moving with traffic that’s flowing faster than the speed limit, which is 5-20 over in any in congested area. My daughter bussed to school from Markham to St Mikes, bus drivers received a lower score than me.
My point was more related to relative behaviors and miles driven relative to payouts. I’ve driven continuously since 1978, as has my wife, neither of us has an at fault claim. Neither of us drive like your grandma, but we have managed well over a million miles each without claims, most of that in a red hot insurance zone
I can see where driving data could help reduce our costs.
Another thing that I like is the pay as you drive option. I switched over to CAA My Pace, I keep an old truck on the road at my place up north for $150/yeaar + $55 for each thousand KM, and my old Jeep here as a spare for same. Neither gets much driving, but if I need a truck or tow capable vehicle I have one ready on the cheap.
It's not so much that it helps them make money, regulators allow them to simply pass the cost along to customers, they are not obliged to fight fraud in any meaningful way so they don't.But doesn't fraud help make them money by justifying increases?? To me it's a "why bother" from them as its a win.
I think they do like the idea. First, they only do it on a monitored basis and not everyone qualifies for the program, they pick and choose good drivers only. In my case I dragged over some home policies and 3 other cars attached to a low risk upside, that's a lot of upside.I dont think the insurance companies care much for pay as you drive. There are many primary and secondary vehicles that dont get driven much. These policies subsidize everyone else because we get dinged liability, accident benefits etc for each vehicle.
Same with Bikes. Im sure a bunch of us would like to own an SS and a touring etc but when you get a 10% discount its not worth it.
If you own X number of cars, with a waiver stating only you can drive them, the premia should be fire and theft on all of them + the highest collision and liability or it should be split based on % of usage.
Having 2 cars and 2 bikes and paying 4 full coverages with a small discount is a pure scam.