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by pflats 4839 days ago
Statistically, someone in her age category is significantly less likely to require the insurance than someone in yours. Car rental shops don't want to do big background checks on every single customer every day, so their economic incentive is to have an easy over-under.

It seems like you two are outliers. That's what the insurance is for.

2 comments

No, I wholeheartedly disagree. There's nothing wrong with being over or under 25 - it's the UK insurance system that is broken. I come from a country where you buy insurance per car,not per person. So you buy a single insurance which is determined by the age and power of the car, and anyone with a valid licence can drive it. The amount you are insured against is the same as in the UK, so why is it that if I wanted to insure myself on a 1.2 Corsa I would have to pay above 2000 pounds/year, a car which I could get fully comp+assistance for myself in my country for 300 quid per year? If I wanted to get insurance just for myself(not shared) on my dad's 4.4L V8 Land Rover, I would pay 800 quid for full comp. In the UK insuring the same car would cost me in excess of 6 thousand pounds. I have had my driver's licence for 4 years and never had an accident, driven probably more than 150k+ miles now yet my insurance is an order of magnitude higher because some idiots want to street race without insurance? Talk about fairness.
> The amount you are insured against is the same as in the UK...

What is the cost if you seriously injure someone (lifetime disablement) in the two countries? That is the biggest risk the insurer is worried about. AFAIK in the UK the liability of the insurance company is unlimited.

That isn't to say that the UK system is fine. The high cost of insurance for young drivers makes driving uninsured attractive with various risks that come with that.

Personal injury - the same, unlimited. Damage to private property - up to 5 million euros. Both countries are within the EU and you can drive between them using the same insurance, so I think it has to be the same by law. So I could in theory bring my dad's Land Rover on my own 800 quid insurance and drive it in the UK even if insuring it there would cost me a few thousand pounds, and I would have the same kind of coverage, or even better.
In the absence of any readily apparent data I'd posit length of holding a licence is most likely a better marker than age on the probability of an insurance claim. Considering the proof of age is via the driving licence which also has this information (as well as a record of any penalty points) this would surely make more sense to use and involve no increase in background checks.