News1 min ago
I need help.
8 Answers
If a car hits me, do i pay exess?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.If a car hits your car you sue the other driver and inform your insurance company of your action. Your IC will send you a claim form which they take up with the other drivers IC. Your IC will give you the go ahead for repairs.....don't repair till they tell you as Assessors & photos may be required. Hire of replacement car will be advised by your own IC.
Excess will be claimed from other driver, if they are at fault.
Excess will be claimed from other driver, if they are at fault.
Hi Ploppyp.... lol brilliant username !
If a car hits you personally, then you'd do better to go to hospital to get yourself checked out for broken bones etc...
However, if you mean, a car hits your car then if the repairs would cost less than the *excess* value then you pay for the repairs... anything over that amount and the insurance company will pay for the whole repair. The big problem is that the repairs quoted to insurance companies by the bigger accident repair companies tend to be seriously inflated amounts and can often be more than the car is worth. In this case, then the insurance company will view the repair as being uneconomical and will write off your car (ie scrap it) and just give you the market value - which might be a lot less than it is really worth to you, especially if you've had the car for a long time and know its history.
If a car hits you personally, then you'd do better to go to hospital to get yourself checked out for broken bones etc...
However, if you mean, a car hits your car then if the repairs would cost less than the *excess* value then you pay for the repairs... anything over that amount and the insurance company will pay for the whole repair. The big problem is that the repairs quoted to insurance companies by the bigger accident repair companies tend to be seriously inflated amounts and can often be more than the car is worth. In this case, then the insurance company will view the repair as being uneconomical and will write off your car (ie scrap it) and just give you the market value - which might be a lot less than it is really worth to you, especially if you've had the car for a long time and know its history.
Amazes me how many drivers agree to excesses but havnt a clue what it means or why its there, no one ever reads there policy. What excess?..is the usual comment when presented with the invoice...
higher the excess lower the premium...we have repaired cars with 3 seperate claims with an excess of �500 x3 = �1,500...customer was not happy, but thats what they agreed to when they took the policy out..
higher the excess lower the premium...we have repaired cars with 3 seperate claims with an excess of �500 x3 = �1,500...customer was not happy, but thats what they agreed to when they took the policy out..