shintoki said:See I find this funny. Just because the crash wasn't your fault, didn't mean you didn't do anything wrong either or your driving isn't shitty. :lol
Wtf no I haven't.SnakeswithLasers said:The fact is, you're a high risk OP; you've openly admitted to speeding regularly and have gotten a ticket for it.
I avoided many accidents because the people around me at the time were driving like shit and they would have either hit me or caused me to be in danger if I had not avoided them.SnakeswithLasers said:Add to that the OPs claim to have "avoided many accidents in his time" and it's kind of obvious where the problem is.
SnakeswithLasers said:Add to that the OPs claim to have "avoided many accidents in his time" and it's kind of obvious where the problem is.
I did and Progressive online showed a marginal improvement. I'm waiting back to hear from my agent to see how much lower I can get with good grades.suffah said:Someone else posted that bit about speeding regularly, not the OP.
Also, have you called Progressive or one of those sites that shops around for you?
From my years and years of experience of being driven by both men and women, I'd have to agree, men in general are better and more skilled drivers. When younger they can be more reckless, but that's about it. Also, do you respond "damn" when insurance companies say men are worse drivers than women under 25?OuterWorldVoice said:damn
reilo said:Wtf no I haven't.
Seven years isn't a long time? :lolSnakeswithLasers said:Ya, I read the wrong post. Sorry. But I'll still assume that you speed regularly, because you probably do--especially considering you've been caught once. And even if you don't, I don't blame the insurance company for thinking that a male under 25 with a speeding ticket is a habitual speeder and thus a high risk.
I just don't get why it's so hard to understand that insurance rates are based on statistics. Seven years aint all that long, and you're still relatively inexperienced. If you think you're so much better than every other statistical liability 20 year old guy out there, well, I don't know what to tell you except: Welcome to the real world where nobody cares about you.
reilo said:I did and Progressive online showed a marginal improvement. I'm waiting back to hear from my agent to see how much lower I can get with good grades.
The Amica website rejected me the minute I selected "I have one speeding ticket". Apparently you need to have a completely clean record - not a single ticket, no matter what kind of ticket - for them to insure you.
reilo said:Seven years isn't a long time? :lol
So, let me ask you this:
28 year old male, married. He's been driving since he was 24. He has one speeding ticket. He pays $100/mo for his insurance.
22 year old male, single. He's been driving since he was 15. He has one speeding ticket. He pays $250/mo for his insurance.
Who's the more experienced driver?
Realistically speaking, that's bullshit.StopMakingSense said:Statistically the 22 year old is the higher risk.
reilo said:Realistically speaking, that's bullshit.
Rigorous testing comprised of personality diagnosis from Psychologists and several hours of simulator testing culminating in a real world test of his abilities at the Daytona 500. Only then would they truly know his driving abilities and what mistakes he may or may not make and I'm sure it wouldn't add too much to a premium, also shopping around for insurance would be fun.StopMakingSense said:How do you propose the auto insurance industry take into account your awesomeness then?
I didn't say to completely ignore statistic.Narag said:If statistics were ignored per the OP request, wouldn't his premiums be even higher than he's paying now given his history as opposed to someone of the same age/gender without any such marks against him?
StopMakingSense said:Statistically the 22 year old is the higher risk.
reilo said:It just doesn't make much sense that my best friend, at age 25 with ten times the worse driving record while driving a premium car (Mercedes), living in a much worse area (St Louis), pays $100 less a month than I do.
Not sure. But $100/mo is quite a large difference, despite the provider. Especially when you take into account his record, car brand, and living area.Narag said:Its probably silly to ask but does he have insurance through the same provider as you?
Uh, no.reilo said:Not sure. But $100/mo is quite a large difference, despite the provider. Especially when you take into account his record, car brand, and living area.
Why the hell is everyone in here putting words into my mouth?mAcOdIn said:Uh, no.
If all the companies were charging the same why even have different companies? Why not just have one single company if we're to mandate the costs in that fashion? It's easy to get 100 dollar differences in a premium when shopping for basic liability on my 88 Bronco let alone any kind of serious coverage and that's how it should be.
You're basically saying you shouldn't have to shop around and I think that's lazy.
Amica is what my dad uses, decent rates for NY and never had a claim problem with them.sonarrat said:Just checked.. the rate they gave me for auto alone, is enough to get me auto, renter's, and earthquake insurance with Amica.
Please, I didn't put any words into your mouth, you said: "But $100/mo is quite a large difference, despite the provider."reilo said:Why the hell is everyone in here putting words into my mouth?
I've already stated that I've started shopping around and that I haven't found too big of a difference in offerings.
jakonovski said:In Reilo's defence, it is smart to buy a newer car. It's much safer when you've got stuff like airbags, ABS and ESP/ESC/whatever it's called.
The insurance company is basically saying, "it's ok if you get maimed as long as the car's a cheaply replaced banger".
ATF487 said:Eh, definitely from a reliability standpoint, but most cars in the last 20 years have airbags/anti lock breaks
His complaint was with the price, and his car does have a fair bit to do with it. I don't really agree with the way the insurance industry sets rates, but you can play within the rules for a few things, this being one of them.
reilo said:The things you need to know about me:
22 year old single male, about to graduate college in two weeks - 3.0 GPA+ student, work full-time, been driving for seven years, one speeding ticket (doing less than 10mph over the limit for a $95 ticket that expires in 6 months) in that timeframe, two not-at-fault accidents, and making payments on a $20,000 car loan for $305/mo.
Insurance companies reward for being a responsible driver that keeps his nose clean?
$265/mo in insurance payments. Their reason? Well, it comes down to two things:
My age and my gender.
How in the world does it make any sort of fucking sense that I should pay for the misfits of others when it comes to my own car insurance policy? Charge me based on my record, not on some algorithm that some jackass in some cubicle arbitrarily made up to charge me higher rates because I'm lumped within a "bracket" that I have obviously nothing in common.
Somehow, someway, when I magically turn 25, I will be a more responsible driver than I already am. And when I turn 25, I will have been driving for ten years at that point. Yet if I were to start driving for the first time in my life the day I turned 25 years old, I would be considered a more responsible and better driver?
One day of driving in the auto-insurance world's minds at the age of 25 makes me a better driver than ten years of driving experience and a clean record. Great logic there, dickheads.
Who else here is in the same boat and frustrated as shit?
No, you said:mAcOdIn said:Please, I didn't put any words into your mouth, you said: "But $100/mo is quite a large difference, despite the provider."
Only logical conclusion any reasonable person could come up with from that quote is that you think all policies for the same coverage should not be able to vary by a hundred dollars.
What places have you checked? Looked into any discounts that may also be available via work, consolidation of plans, and stuff like that?
You're mad because you think your friend is getting a better deal, and I'm sure that him being 25 IS part of it, I do think that part is BS, but what else? Has he been using them for a long time and had his premium reduced? Does he get a discount for where he works, or maybe a credit union he's a member of? Does he have renters or home owners insurance with the same company and maybe get a discount there? Have you tried the provider he uses, maybe it's a cheaper local one? Does he pay it all it once instead of monthly getting a discount?
You can always call Amica anyways, I think their website sucks for quotes, they didn't even list my car but I switched to them from Progressive. I've liked them so far but going from Geico and Progressive to Amica was a bit weird having to actually deal with a person again when Geico and Progressive were so automated I hadn't spoken to an insurance agent in a decade.
Nowhere did I say that.You're basically saying you shouldn't have to shop around and I think that's lazy.
reilo said:The Amica website rejected me the minute I selected "I have one speeding ticket". Apparently you need to have a completely clean record - not a single ticket, no matter what kind of ticket - for them to insure you.
What else can one imply? Also keep in mind, when I say "too lazy to shop around" I kinda mean that you feel you shouldn't have to shop around as all the rates should just be super competitive, I don't think that was an incorrect impression of what you said. Anyways though.reilo said:No, you said:
Nowhere did I say that.
And I have shopped around - I've looked at Progressive, Geico, State Farm, and Amica as the big agencies out there. Progressive and Geico offer similar deals but still quite expensive, and State Farm is in the same figure as my current provider.
I'll call my agent tomorrow and see if he got me that student discount and whether or not that dropped it far enough to be comparable to these other agencies.
El Papa said:Am a male with a great driving record. My insurance is $90 every 3 months. HAHA!
People from Australia told me that car insurance is not required to drive there. This was about 4 years ago.
El Papa said:Am a male with a great driving record. My insurance is $90 every 3 months. HAHA!
People from Australia told me that car insurance is not required to drive there. This was about 4 years ago.