Auto Insurance Tip #2 Failing to Disclose a Driver in Household
Posted by admin | Posted in Around The Community, Auto, Business Insurance, Health, Miscellaneous, Office News, Personal Insurance, Uncategorized | Posted on 14-04-2011
Tags: accident, agent, auto, automobile, california, car, city of industry, claim, compensation, coverage, discounts, incorporated, insurance, liability, Los Angeles, loss, medical, personal, protection, rate, safety, saving, southern, vehicle, walnut
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Failing to disclose all drivers in a household can be dangerous! While it may be tempting not to mention a youthful driver, such as a child or younger brother and/or sister or even a roommate that lives in the same household when applying for auto insurance in order to get a lower rate, can backfire on you.
The auto insurance application is a contract and the questions that are asked in the application are part of a legal agreement between you, the policy holder and the insurance company and both parties are basing their agreement on the belief that the application reflects truthful representations by both parties. If you misrepresent a fact in the application you could void coverage. For example you are purchasing an auto insurance policy and you live in the same household as your parents and a younger sibling. You apply for auto insurance and decide to include your parents but not to mention the younger sibling. Later on in the policy period the undisclosed sibling decides to drive your vehicle and gets in a wreck, the insurance carrier could deny coverage, based upon a material misrepresentation on the application in an effort to evade the higher rate.
When applying for insurance if you do not want to cover a particular person in the household you can specifically request to exclude that person. Just understand they cannot drive your vehicle unless you have notified the insurance carrier to add that person back onto the policy, removing the exclusion and you receive confirmation back from the carrier that the exclusion has been removed prior to allowing them to drive. The insurance carrier will then charge the appropriate premium for the risk on the younger driver.
Be careful on adding and excluding drivers repeatedly on a policy as some carriers may place a limit on the number oif times they can be added and removed or require you to either include or exclude the person that resides in the same household.
This does not apply to people who do not live in the household that you may lend your car to on a rare occassion. If you lend your vehicle to another person on a regular or frequent basis you should add them to your policy as some applications ask for all regular drivers of the vehicle.
Consult with your agent or carrier on how best to handle a youthful driver in the household and how your policy is affected.



