Dropped by my insurance company, what to do?

Moraff

Active member
Nov 14, 2003
3,648
0
36
Is it possible that my no-fault accident (in which the insurance company had to pay for my total loss) had something to do with me being dropped? If so, is this fair?
Possibly when you combine it with the other violations. May give them the idea that while you may not have been at fault this time you appear to have poor driving habits which could lead to them paying out again.

Is it fair? Possibly, without knowing the true and complete story of your record I can't say, but then again no one ever said life was fair after all.
 

Ceiling Cat

Well-known member
Feb 25, 2009
28,655
1,403
113
There is nothing to do, except shop around and try to find another company that will insure you.
 

sasemohan123

Active member
Sep 23, 2010
4,172
2
38
Because by law you are requires to have insurance to drive, ppl like you (and me 10 years ago) who have been REJECTED by your own ins com have to get it from Facility. It is likely you will find no company that will offer you a policy because of the cancellation, i found that out the hard way. They ( ins companies) get together and create this money-eater called Facility and it is the ONLY one that will give you a policy. At a high rate, that's bad news. The good news is if you maintain good driving record, you will be able to go to a "regular" ins comp after 1 year with Facility.

No-fault is very confusing when it's time for me to claim on my policy, either the claim is Direct compentation (not my fault) or not. It is always considered a claim. For a certain period of time and the nature of the claims/violations, the number of claims/violations, demerit points... they might classify you as high-risk and withdraw from issuing your policy, then you'll end up this way. Best thing is to talk with your ins rep or booker (depending on what comp you are dealing with) to get all the fact up front, worse case scenario...etc.

I found out that i should NEVER make a claim on some minor damage even when i am not at fault, better off paying it myself. That is especially true when one already have a history (of CLAIMS for 2 or 3 years, i'm not sure how long). Always remember: a claim for broken windshield is a claim no matter how high is your deductable.

I wish you luck.
 

needinit

New member
Jan 19, 2004
1,193
1
0
They should invent a gadget on a car that beeps once you pass a certain speed . (that you can adjust)
Already exists in cars in Australia as Police are always looking for speeders and boozers on the roads.
 

shai

Member
Apr 11, 2002
532
20
18
Yes it can if the company has a 9 or 10 year driving record. New rating models are going up to 20 years now
 

sleazure

Active member
Aug 30, 2001
4,094
23
38
I was dropped for two minor violations and a speeding ticket within two years. One of them was definitely BS, but I plead guilty to avoid the hassle. What are my options? Any insurance companies that will take me?

What happens if I don`t get any violations in several years, will they accept me again?

Basically, I only got 9 demerit points.
Over here you said you had 3 violations in one year. https://terb.cc/vbulletin/showthrea...o-many-traffic-violations&highlight=interview

get your story straight
 

danibbler

Active member
Feb 2, 2002
2,269
0
36
Toronto
I like the way he says "I only got 9 demerit points" and in the interview thread he says that he's got a run of bad luck. Bad luck? Bad luck at getting caught at what he was doing!

Most of the offences that gets you up to 9 demerit points in less than 2 years look to be pretty serious/life-threatening.
 

userz

Member
Nov 5, 2005
758
0
16
Do like untold number of people in Ontario do and drive without insurance. The rest of us will be forced to pay for you and your bad driving anyway since all insurance policies have a fee built in them to screw us out of money for the uninsured drivers. Sure, you'll be in heaps of trouble once you're caught but you likely won't have thought that far ahead. You could also try to get a bare-bones policy covering you for up to $200,000 liability and no theft or collision coverage and stop driving like an asshat. If there's a lien on your car you might as well sell it and familiarize yourself with bus schedules.
 

danibbler

Active member
Feb 2, 2002
2,269
0
36
Toronto
I think that the OP lives somewhere north of Toronto. I wouldn't want to use an e-bike out there!

Get an E-Bike. No license, no insurance needed.
Costs about 1 K I think. Much less than insurance.
Depends what you need the transportation for though and how far you have to travel.
To get from A to B fine, but otherwise...
 

MrBingo

Banned
May 6, 2011
860
0
0

sleazure

Active member
Aug 30, 2001
4,094
23
38
For your own sake, you could sign up for a refresher with an outfit like Young Drivers of Canada. They might show you where you're going wrong.

Either that, or find someone to nominate you for the Canada's Worst Driver TV show.
 

nottyboi

Well-known member
May 14, 2008
22,535
1,387
113
6 years minimum unless he bought protection for his accident free status
the thing about accident forgiveness is it is a license to steal.. even if YOUR insurance company "forgives you" it means you are stuck with them for 6 years. Isn't that great? So you pay for THEIR retention program.
 
Toronto Escorts