Posts Tagged ‘First’

FIRST TIME CAR BUYERS: CAR INSURANCE OPTIONS FOR CANADIAN DRIVERS

Monday, March 15th, 2010

Before you get behind the wheel of a car in Canada, you had better make sure that you are insured. Every province and territory in the country requires drivers to have insurance, and driving without it is a costly risk, because you could lose your license as a result. Before you buy insurance, but, you need to take the time to do some research to ensure that you get the right type.

The Basic Requirements

The first thing you need to know is what you are required to have. All of the provinces and states require basic liability coverage for their drivers. This is coverage that will pay for hurt you cause to someone else or his or her property. For instance, if you are involved in a car accident where you are the at-fault driver, your liability coverage would pay the medical bills and car repair bills for the other people involved in the accident. This is a common requirement in other countries.

Canadian drivers must carry an addition coverage option, because when it comes to car insurance, Canada requires Accident Benefits/Bodily Injury coverage. This coverage will take care of your medical care and any loss of income you experience after a crash, even if you are the one at fault for the injuries. In other words, if you are involved in a motor vehicle accident and no one else is liable for your injuries, this coverage will cover them.

Other Options to Consider

While you are required to have Liability and Accident Benefits/Bodily Injury coverage to drive in Canada, you may wish to have additional coverage. Neither of these Canada insurance options covers hurt to your vehicle that is not caused by another vehicle or driver. They also do not cover hurt to your vehicle that you caused. Natural causes are also not covered. If a tree branch fell on your car and smashed in the roof, you would be stuck paying for the repair or buying a new car without any car insurance coverage.

If you have a loan on your car, the bank will not be willing to take this risk. You will probably be forced to buy additional car insurance for as long as you have the loan. The two additional policies that you may have to buy if you have a loan are Collision and Comprehensive.

Hurt to your car in a motor vehicle accident, even if you are completely at fault, would be covered in a Collision policy. In fact, even if you drive the vehicle into something that is not a vehicle, you would be covered with a Collision policy.

Comprehensive insurance covers non-motor-vehicle hurt to your car. If your car were stolen, vandalized, or harmed by a natural disaster, this coverage would pay for the hurts. That tree branch that fell on your car and smashed the roof would be an event covered by comprehensive coverage.

Considerations When Buying Coverage

When buying insurance coverage, you have to strike a delicate balance between affordable premiums and proper coverage. Some people buy too much insurance, and they end up paying more for their insurance coverage than is worthwhile when compared to the value of their car. Others buy too small insurance and end up with huge bills when they are in an accident.

How can you best determine this balance? You need to know what your car is worth. Check the Blue Book value of the car, and then compare it to the amount you are paying in premiums. If you find that you are paying close to the value in premiums over two or three years, you may wish to drop a coverage option. Place the additional money aside into a savings account, and use that money towards repairs if you end up having an accident. If you do not have an accident, use that money as a down payment on your next car buy, rather spending thousands on auto insurance that will only provide a few hundred dollars for your vehicle.

WHY BUYING CAR INSURANCE SHOULD BE THE FIRST THING ON YOUR TO-DO LIST AFTER GRADUATION

Sunday, March 7th, 2010

Yes! It’s finally here! Well, nearly. Graduation is right around the corner, and with it the promise of freedom, opportunity and the chance to get out from underneath the thumb of your well-meaning but often overbearing parents, teachers, coaches, professors and the annoying boy that sits behind you in history and can’t…quit…kicking…the…back…of…your…chair. You’ve got a lot to do, and not a lot of time to do it in. But wait! Pull back the reins and slow those horses down, because before you go too much further it’s time to start thinking about buying your own car insurance.

Okay, granted, car insurance isn’t nearly as fascinating as job hunting and apartment hunting and making fantastic plans with friends to spend a weekend at a cute small hidey-hole in the Florida Keys. It is, but, equally as vital. As soon as you’re an “adult” and free of the confines of the student scene you’re not going to be covered by your parents’ insurance policy anymore. That means it’s going to be up to you to make sure you’re protected if you’re involved in an accident.

With fantastic power (or in this case, fantastic freedom) comes fantastic responsibility-and, for most people, limited financial resources. The average entry level salary starts between $25,000 and $30,000, which, by the time you’ve figured in rent, food, electricity, telephone, cable, Internet and water bills, along with the cost of your car payment, gasoline and, occasionally, doing something besides watching “Dollhouse” on a Friday night, that doesn’t go as far as you’d reckon it would. You’re going to be pinching pennies for the first couple of years following graduation. Those years aren’t the time to be involved in an accident without car insurance coverage.

The average car costs $20,000. The average emergency room trip is$1,049 (BEFORE the doctor starts writing prescriptions). Add those up, multiply by the number of vehicles and people involved in an accident and solve for X, where X equals the amount of money you’re going to be held legally responsible for after an accident. The cost of an accident involving two cars, where each car holds a driver and a passenger and in which both cars are totaled, can exceed $44,000 dollars.

That’s probably not a bill you want hanging over your head just as you’re getting a feel for being an adult. On the other hand, a excellent car insurance policy that offers comprehensive and collision coverage, as well as personal liability and, if you haven’t already obtained your own health insurance, medical expense protection for you after an accident, can whittle that cost down to $500 or less. Can you reckon of something better to do with $43,500?

Probably.

Along with protection from bills resulting from accidents you cause, a excellent car insurance policy can also protect you from accidents caused by other people who aren’t as well informed about the need for car insurance as you are. Recent studies estimate that by 2010, over 16% of drivers on the road are going to be driving without insurance. If you’re involved in an accident with one of them you’re going to be pulling teeth trying to get back the amount of money you’ve pumped into your car-and the expense of getting that car back on the road so you can get to work.

Car insurance is one of the most vital choices you’re going to make after your huge day, when the strains of “Pomp and Circumstance” have finally died in the air and it’s time to go on with your life. It’s better for everyone to just take a deep breath, close your eyes and sign on the dotted line for your own car insurance policy as soon as possible.

 

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