California Auto Insurance Claim Denied Because of Teen Driver?

October 21, 2007 by fashun · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Teen drivers 

Reader question:

I heard that you can get a claim denied if your teenager is on your  California auto insurance policy. Is that true?

Phillip

Thank you for your question, Phillip.

I’m not sure where you heard that, Phillip, but it’s definitely not true that your California auto insurance company will deny your claim just because you have a teenager on your policy. Heck, you’ll probably get your claim denied if you decide not to add your teenager to your  insurance policy, because if you don’t provide such important information, then your  auto insurance company is unable to adjust your car insurance premium to fit the amount of risk you pose to the company.

One thing that I think you might be thinking about is the recent report done on parents whose claims were denied because they had claimed themselves to be the main drivers on vehicles of which their high risk teenagers were actually the main drivers. I think this might be the result of a bit of miscommunication.

Many people who deal out auto insurance advice, myself included, have urged parents to make sure that car insurance companies don’t automatically add the teenagers to the most expensive and costly to insure vehicle on their policy. This is definitely something that you should worry about, since car insurance companies tend to, if not told otherwise, put the highest risk driver with the highest risk car, even if the driver in question never touches the car.

However, making sure that your teenager’s name isn’t added to a car that they don’t drive isn’t the same as deliberately putting your teenager’s name on a car that they don’t drive. This is called fronting, and is considered fraud, so I advise every parent thinking about doing this on their California auto insurance policy to think again. The truth is that most parents who do this don’t even know they’re committing fraud, at least according to sixty percent of the parents in the report.

Make sure that you give accurate information and that your  insurance company follows it when rating your policy, but giving inaccurate information yourself could land you in trouble.

Cheers,

Fashun Guadarram.