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	<title>How to Choose Good Car Insurance &#187; cheap car insurance</title>
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		<title>How To Get Even With Your Car Insurance Company In 10 Easy Steps &#8211; Part 2</title>
		<link>http://www.webfotoart.com/how-to-get-even-with-your-car-insurance-company-in-10-easy-steps-part-2/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 23 Nov 2009 20:59:17 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Finance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[car insurance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[car insurance quotes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cheap car insurance]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.webfotoart.com/how-to-get-even-with-your-car-insurance-company-in-10-easy-steps-part-2/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Author: Tom O&#8217;Leary Source: download In Part 1, we detailed the first five strategies on how to cut your car insurance costs. In Part 2, we show you the second five. STEP 6 &#8211; Review, Change or Cancel No Fault &#38; PIP (Personal Injury Protection) No-Fault Coverage, and it&#8217;s Twin &#8211; PIP &#8211; started out [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Author: Tom O&#8217;Leary<br />
Source: download</p>
<p>In Part 1, we detailed the first five strategies on how to cut your car insurance costs. In Part 2, we show you the second five.<br />
STEP 6 &#8211; Review, Change or Cancel No Fault &amp; PIP (Personal Injury Protection)<br />
No-Fault Coverage, and it&#8217;s Twin &#8211; PIP &#8211; started out as great idea&#8217;s. Your premiums were actually going to be lowered. Then, your State Politicians got involved (at the urging of Insurance Lobbyists, of course) and mucked it up.<br />
You see, no-fault insurance coverage was originally intended to have each individual&#8217;s losses, covered by their own car insurance company &#8211; no matter who was at fault.<br />
Today, in many States, car insurance companies are making a ton of money on no-fault because the insurance companies convinced State law-makers to make &#8220;modifications.&#8221;<br />
Today, because of the these changes, car insurance companies have actually used the no-fault laws to reduce payments on a claim made by a customer, instead of reducing car insurance premiums as it was supposed to do.<br />
So, premiums keep going up-and-up and insurance companies end up paying less for claims &#8211; Someone&#8217;s getting rich on that deal&#8230;.and it&#8217;s not you.<br />
And to make matters worse, some States (with really, really talented Insurance Lobbyist&#8217;s) also require an additional premium be paid on top of the no-fault premium. This beauty is called Personal Injury Protection (PIP).<br />
PIP is a &#8220;wide-blanket&#8221; of coverage and can provide Collision Coverage, Hospitalization, Social Security Disability, Workers Comp, Personal Disability Insurance &amp; Life Insurance.<br />
The problem with PIP and what it covers is&#8230;.<br />
You already gave most, if not all, of these coverage&#8217;s anyway, don&#8217;t you? So, you&#8217;re paying twice!<br />
So, you need to do a couple of things:<br />
Google &#8220;minimum levels of required auto insurance&#8221; to see if No-Fault Insurance and/or PIP Is required in your State;<br />
Then, check your policy. If it&#8217;s not required by your State to have No-Fault/PIP Coverage and it&#8217;s on your policy &#8211; cancel it. If No-Fault/PIP is required by your State&#8230;.take the absolute minimum. Here&#8217;s how.<br />
If you must have No-Fault/PIP, ask for and get a deductible from your car insurance company.<br />
STEP 7 &#8211; Cancel Medical Coverage.<br />
Medical Coverage, on most car insurance policies, is a promise to pay &#8220;reasonable&#8221; medical expenses for anyone who is riding in your car should you have an accident&#8230;as well as anyone in your car should it get hit by someone else.<br />
Cancel it. You don&#8217;t need it.<br />
Why is that you say? Well, medical coverage as part of your car insurance policy is a duplicate of your own:<br />
- Medical Plan; &#8211; Any Life Insurance Coverage you might have, as well as; &#8211; The Liability Sections of almost every car insurance policy written in the U.S.<br />
Think of it this way&#8230;.Do you have a Health/Medical/Hospitalization Plan thru work or an Association you belong to?<br />
Then why are you paying premiums for Medical/Hospitalization Coverage on your Car Insurance Policy?<br />
Here&#8217;s what&#8217;s going to happen when you tell the car insurance company or Agent that you &#8220;Don&#8217;t want the Hospitalization/Medical Coverage.&#8221; You&#8217;re going to hear very slick &#8220;scare tactics&#8221; to help change your mind.<br />
The insurance company employee will say &#8220;Well, if you&#8217;re in an accident, and it&#8217;s your fault, who&#8217;s going to cover the medical bills for any injured passengers in your car?&#8221;<br />
Here&#8217;s your answer. Your family is already covered by your Health/Hospitalization Plan. If anybody else is in the car and they&#8217;re injured &#8211; they&#8217;re covered by your Bodily Injury Liability coverage that you&#8217;re already paying for&#8230;.and their own Health/Hospitalization Plan.<br />
So go ahead &#8211; save some more money and get rid of this coverage.<br />
STEP 8 &#8211; Cancel Death, Dismemberment &amp; Loss of Sight.<br />
Do you have any of these coverage&#8217;s on your existing car insurance policy? If so &#8211; cancel them.<br />
And if you&#8217;re a first time car insurance buyer or, just looking at getting several car insurance quotes, don&#8217;t let anyone talk you into them!<br />
Why?<br />
Because, these coverage&#8217;s are an absolute waste of money. Most of these optional coverage&#8217;s are simply &#8220;glorified&#8221; life insurance policies with ridiculous provisions and horribly overpriced premiums. If you need life insurance, make it a separate Insurance Policy.<br />
STEP 9 &#8211; Cancel The Extras<br />
Do you have &#8220;Roadside Assistance&#8221; or &#8220;Rental Car Reimbursement&#8221; on your policy? If so, cancel them.<br />
And again, if you&#8217;re a first time insurance buyer or getting a few car insurance quotes, don&#8217;t bother with these coverage&#8217;s.<br />
Why? Because they&#8217;re severely overpriced, are rarely ever used, and limit what you can and cannot do.<br />
For instance, some rental car reimbursement&#8221; coverage is almost $100 a year for each vehicle on your policy. So if you have two cars, you&#8217;ll spend almost $2,000 on rental car coverage in the next 10 years &#8211; and likely never even use it.<br />
And roadside assistance? The piece-of-mind it offers gets trampled by the premiums the car insurance companies want for this coverage. Roadside assistance is a good idea. But use AAA for a cheaper solution.<br />
STEP 10 &#8211; Terminate Comprehensive &amp; Collision Coverage On Older Cars.<br />
If you have an older car &#8211; by that I mean one that&#8217;s worth less than $2,000 wholesale (the amount a car dealer would give you if you were trading it in) cancel any Comprehensive and Collision Coverage you have or decline that option when getting a car insurance quote.<br />
Here&#8217;s why. If an 8 year-old car and a brand new car have identical damage, the cost to repair both will be identical as well, even though the 8 year-old car is worth next-to-nothing.<br />
You see the cost of a bumper and fender are the same &#8211; whether it&#8217;s for a brand new car, or one that is 8 years-old. That&#8217;s why your premiums don&#8217;t go down as the value of the car goes down. Your payments remain almost the same, year-after-year-after-year.<br />
But, the bottom drops-out of what you&#8217;ll be able to collect on that older car. For instance, if your car is &#8220;totaled&#8221;, your insurance company will only pay you the wholesale value of your car.<br />
So, let&#8217;s say your car is worth $1,000, but the total damage is more than $4,000, the insurance company is only going to give you a check for $1,000&#8230;.minus your deductible, of course.<br />
So you might end up getting $500 back. Sounds like a lousy deal&#8230;.but that&#8217;s how it works.<br />
So, the rule-of-thumb is this &#8211; cancel your comp &amp; collision coverage when your vehicles value is less than $2,000&#8230;.or you&#8217;ll be throwing your money away.<br />
Okay &#8211; you&#8217;ve jotted down some notes and are ready to make some changes to your car insurance policy. So pick up the phone and start slashing your premiums!<br />
Tom O&#8217;Leary is an Automotive Portfolio Analyst based in Cincinnati, Ohio and Publisher of http://www.mynewcarpurchase.com, a consumer focused web site that assists with buying a new or used car, cheap car insurance quotes and finding cheaper car &amp; truck financing.</p>
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