How Your Credit Report Affects Your Car Insurance Rate

 

October 18, 2007 by · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Compare Insurance Rates 

Your credit doesn’t affect your driving skills, and there are plenty of drivers with the worst credit ever who are also the best drivers around. However, if you want to get cheap car insurance, then having a lot of negative accounts on your credit report might prove an obstacle. Although the car insurance company does not look at your report the same way as, say, a car dealership does, bad is bad and if one thinks your credit report isn’t so great, the other will as well.

Using credit reports to affect your car insurance rates is no longer an occasional thing. Almost all (upward of 90%) car insurance companies check credit before they give out a policy, and the same goes for companies who do home owner’s insurance coverage. When they check your credit report, they will gather the information into what they call an insurance risk score. Over fifty percent of the companies in the above ninety percent in turn take that insurance risk score and use it to decide if you will have a  insurance premium or an expensive one.

According to Fair, Isaacs, and Co., a company which comes up with insurance risk scores which are in use by over three hundred car insurance companies all over the country, while both credit scores and insurance scores use the same information to come to their result, they are not exactly the same.

As a matter of fact,  car insurance companies look at the report in a different way when they weigh the score. In the end, the scores of credit and insurance can end up having a difference of as much as ten percent.

When you get a credit score, normally they are looking at how stable your accounts are, whether you are constantly opening and closing new ones and so on. It’s also important to your FICO credit score how much you owe on certain things. With insurance scores, they just want to know that you pay, and pay regularly.

My Auto Insurance Was Just Canceled – What to Do?

 

October 18, 2007 by · Leave a Comment
Filed under: California Car Insurance 

Reader question:

Is it easy to get auto insurance in California after you’ve had your policy canceled?

Margeret

Thank you for asking, Margeret.

Actually, it can be pretty hard to get California auto insurance  if you have something on your record like a previous cancellation by a car insurance company. This is why it is so important to take care with all of your automobile insurance dealings because if you don’t, then you will have to pay the price. And that price can be as much as a ten percent increase, and that’s only if you can find a company for auto insurance that wants to give you coverage at all.

When you go looking for auto insurance, the company will be able to look at your CLUE report, which aside from containing your claims history, will also have your previous cancellations and nonrenewals. This may influence them to deny your request for coverage, but if they do take you on then they might make you pay your entire yearly premium up front instead of allowing you to do the month by month installment. This can be a good thing for some people, because it is actually slightly more expensive for the installment plan. However, most people don’t have that much money at once.

Another thing that having your auto insurance canceled is that it will affect your credit score. Not all auto insurance companies report to credit agencies, but it is definitely something to think about even if they say you don’t, because most wouldn’t give a straight answer on this. Credit scores are also used hen determining how much you will pay for your auto insurance in California, and if you have a bad credit score, then that price could be pretty high. Even if your driving record is otherwise stellar, it could still hit you hard.

If all else fails, you’ll have to either go to a company for auto insurance in CA that sells policies to customers who are considered high risk. If you do this, you will pay more. And if no one will accept you, then you will have to consider going with the high risk pool for auto insurance which costs even more.

Cheers,

Fashun Guadarrama.