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Tag Archives: Michigan auto insurance

Four Questions Seasonal Employers Need to Ask About Insurance

Contractors EquipmentIf you’re making final preparations before your company’s busy time of year this spring or summer, it’s the perfect time to evaluate your current insurance coverage.  Columbus, Ohio-based Grange Insurance offers four important considerations for seasonal employers to address before business starts to peak.

1. Am I planning to hire any seasonal employees?
Landscaping companies, construction companies and several others hire millions of seasonal workers each spring and summer. If you’re planning to hire any seasonal employees, including teens, be sure to minimize your risk and properly train all of them on necessary safety procedures. These procedures may include steps to avoid injury and damage to company property.  Review your workers compensation insurance with your agent to be sure that payroll estimates are up to date.

2. Have I purchased any new equipment within the last year?
This may seem like a simple question, but often when people purchase new equipment at the end of a season, they forget to secure the appropriate insurance coverage for these items. After you’ve confirmed these new pieces of equipment are insured, also check to make sure the coverage you do have has relevant limits.  Talk with your independent agent if you are uncertain as to what your policy covers.

3. Am I planning to bring a vehicle or other piece of equipment out of storage?
If so, consider taking these vehicles or other pieces heavy equipment to be serviced before you put them back out on the road. Proper service and maintenance can significantly reduce accidents and other safety hazards. And, if any of these vehicles and the tasks they perform are more specialized, you should also double-check with your agent to make sure you’re adequately covered.  Non-traditional equipment like tow trucks, gravel hauling equipment or construction equipment may not be covered under a standard policy.  Discuss your vehicles and any special equipment attached to them with your agent to be sure you have the correct insurance in place.

4. Have I checked my buildings and various properties for winter damage?
Early spring is the best time to check any buildings or other structures for winter damage. Consider taking a walk around all your properties in an attempt to locate any roof damage, gutter blockages or any other potentially dangerous situations. If you identify any potential issues, address them with your insurance agent immediately.

Insurance Planning Service is an independent insurance agency offering a full range of insurance products – auto – home – business – life – health – to individuals, families and businesses throughout Michigan.  Call or visit us on the web today for a quote on your insurance!

734.421.9900  |  800.220.5582  |  www.ipsagency.com

Excerpts courtesy: Grange Insurance newsroom

 

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Michigan Lawmakers Again OK Helmet Law Repeal

Michigan lawmakers are making another attempt at repealing a state law that requires motorcyclists to wear helmets.

The state Senate recently gave final legislative approval to a repeal of the ban by a 24-14 vote late last month. The measure next goes to Republican Gov. Rick Snyder, and it’s not clear whether he will sign it.  Snyder has said he only wants to tackle the helmet law in the context of broader auto insurance reform. But proposals for more sweeping reforms appear stalled in the Legislature.

What’s at issue is the way the unlimited medical benefits in Michigan’s No-Fault Insurance law work with regard to motorcyclists who are injured as a result of an accident involving a motor vehicle. At present, regardless of who is at fault, the injured cyclist’s medical expenses are all paid by the Personal Injury Protection coverage in the motor vehicle’s auto insurance policy.  The concern with repealing the helmet law is that the incidents of permanent head or brain injuries have the potential to increase and cause auto insurance rates to rise unless the No-Fault law is changed.  The proposed No-Fault reform included a provision that would limit the coverage for motorcyclists coming from the auto insurance of the car involved in the accident.

The pending helmet proposal would allow riders 21 or older to go without helmets if they meet certain insurance and experience conditions.  The Legislature has passed bills to repeal the state’s mandatory motorcycle helmet law previously, but the bills were vetoed twice by then-Gov. Jennifer Granholm.

According to CBS News, State Senator Roger Kahn was among those opposed to the repeal.
“Helmets reduce the risk of death by 29 percent. They’re 67 percent effective in preventing brain injuries to motorcycle riders,” Kahn said.

Insurance Institute spokeswoman Lori Conarton told WWJ Newsradio 950 a repeal would result in additional 30 fatalities each year, adding that auto insurance costs for all Michigan residents are also expected to increase.

Conarton estimates allowing motorcyclists to go helmet-less will cost the state a collective $100 million more each year in additional medical claims.

Insurance Planning Service is an independent insurance agency offering a full range of insurance products – auto – home – business – life – health – to individuals, families and businesses throughout Michigan.  Call or visit us on the web today for a quote on your insurance!

734.421.9900  |  800.220.5582  |  www.ipsagency.com

Sources: Insurance Journal, CBS News

 
 

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Ways You Can Make Insurance Exciting!

Have you ever yawned while paying your insurance premium? Have you ever completely forgotten what you were doing while you were in the middle of a conversation with your insurance agent? Have you ever tried to read an insurance policy and instead fallen asleep with the boring document of doom resting on your stomach? If you have, it’s no surprise – because insurance is boring. If you find yourself lulled into a state of not caring thanks to the dull nature of insurance then there’s one prescription that can get you back on track: You need to make insurance exciting.

Think About the End Result
Instead of thinking about how insurance works, think about what it does. A home insurance or flood policy may completely pay for the rebuilding of your home after an insurable incident. A home, flood or renter’s insurance policy may replace the value of all the property you have in your home. An auto insurance policy may get you a new car if yours is totaled or stolen. Liability coverage in your home, auto and renter’s insurance policy can keep you from having to pay the medical expenses of an injured individual. The list of things insurance accomplishes goes on and on.

The benefits of insurance are the key to the product’s excitement factor. In order to put that into perspective, look around, you – see all that stuff? If it’s insured, it may be replaced under the right circumstance. Oh, and see your savings account balance? Beyond paying for deductibles and anything over your limits, that will be preserved as your insurance policies spend money so you don’t have to.

Find the Hidden Gems
Insurance policies often have benefits that you don’t even realize they have. Finding these benefits can make insurance exciting as it opens up a whole new world of opportunity for use. For example, have you checked your health insurance policy to see if it offers any fringe health benefits such as massage or acupuncture? Or, did you know that you may be able to borrow from the cash value of your life insurance policy without paying taxes on the loan? And, if you have a variable policy or indexed policy, did you realize that you could follow the market and change your life insurance policy’s subaccounts to help the cash value grow more?

Sometimes, the most talked about benefits of an insurance policy are not the most exciting. Look at your policies – even if you have to use toothpicks to keep your eyes open during the process – and really study what your benefits are. You are paying for the product after all, you may as well understand what you can get out of it.

Consider the Alternative
Have you ever noticed how something as mundane as grocery shopping becomes exciting when you are hungry and don’t have food in the house? Well, insurance is no different. One of the best ways to make insurance exciting is to see how you would feel if you didn’t have it. Go ahead and take a moment to imagine the worst – and imagine that it happens without the benefit of an insurance policy to make you financially whole after the potentially devastating loss. Imagine you have no car, no home and no money. Imagine how that would affect your life, and then remind yourself that you have insurance and allow the sweet feeling of relief to flow through your veins. Exciting, no?

The Bottom Line
Insurance doesn’t have to be an electrifying product to be a necessary and useful one. Sometimes, insurance is the protective vehicle that allows you to indulge in your thrill-seeking side while limiting the financial consequences, such as when you purchase travel medical insurance with an adventure sports rider. Because insurance isn’t meant to be an exciting journey in itself, it’s designed to make your life’s thrilling journey a little easier and more financially sound.

Let the professionals at Insurance Planning Service help you find the excitement in your insurance!  Insurance Planning Service is an independent insurance agency offering a full range of insurance products – auto – home – business – life – health – to individuals, families and businesses throughout Michigan.  Call or visit us on the web today for a quote on your insurance!

734.421.9900  |  800.220.5582  |  www.ipsagency.com

Courtesy:  Yahoo! Finance, Investopedia.com

 

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MCCA Premium Set At $175.00 per Car for 2012-2013

Livonia, MI - The premium paid to the Michigan Catastrophic Claims Association (“MCCA”) by member insurance companies will be $175.00 per insured vehicle effective July 1, 2012 to June 30, 2013. This represents an increase of $30.00 (21%) over the current MCCA charge of $145.00. The $175.00 assessment represents $141.93 to cover claims; $32.72 to address the $2 billion estimated deficit and $.35 for administrative expenses. The current deficit is estimated at $310.78 per insured car. The MCCA premium charge is determined each year at this time following its annual actuarial evaluation.

Michigan’s unique no-fault auto insurance law provides unlimited lifetime coverage for medical expenses resulting from auto accidents and is the only state in the nation that mandates these unlimited benefits. (The state with the next highest level of benefits mandates only $50,000).  Created by the state legislature in 1978, the MCCA is a private, non-profit association whose mission is to protect the financial integrity of Michigan’s auto insurance industry by providing reinsurance for these unlimited benefits. The MCCA reimburses auto insurance companies for Personal Injury Protection (PIP) benefits paid in excess of $500,000 per claim.

All auto insurance companies operating in Michigan are required to be members and pay premiums for the reinsurance provided by the MCCA. These premiums, together with the insurer’s PIP premium, represent the cost to cover the mandatory unlimited medical benefits which, like other costs and expenses, are reflected in the auto premiums all Michigan policyholders pay.

Each year, more individuals receive benefits resulting from catastrophic automobile accidents and their claim costs are rising. Estimating the ultimate costs of these benefits requires sophisticated analysis but the trend of increasing costs is a key driver of changes to the MCCA assessment.

The MCCA paid out $927 million (more than $133 per insured car) in 2011 for claim costs resulting from catastrophic injuries. The majority of these catastrophic injuries involve closed head injuries, paraplegia, quadriplegia and burns. Since 1979, there have been over 28,000 claims reported to the MCCA, which will cost an estimated $85 billion.

Additional information on the MCCA, including claim payment statistics, audit reports and answers to frequently asked questions can be obtained from its public website: www.michigancatastrophic.com and from the website of the Michigan Office of Financial and Insurance Regulations: www.michigan.gov/ofic.

Insurance Planning Service is an independent insurance agency offering a full range of insurance products – auto – home – business – life – health – to individuals, families and businesses throughout Michigan.  Call or visit us on the web today for a quote on your insurance!

734.421.9900  |  800.220.5582  |  www.ipsagency.com

Source:  MCCA Press Release

 
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Posted by on March 19, 2012 in Auto, Michigan, News, Uncategorized

 

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INSURANCE FINE PRINT: NOT All Personal Auto Policies are Created Equally!

Fine PrintWhen shopping for car insurance many tend to look for the lowest price they can find.  TV and radio ads fill the airwaves luring people to change companies based on lower premium cost or saving money.   

With anything you buy, it is wise to be certain you are receiving the “best value” for the money you spend.  But even “best value” means different things to different people.  When it comes to insurance, it means lowest premium price for some.  For others it means finding the best possible coverage and, for others, it means the best combination of the two.  

The difficulty with insurance is that you’re not buying something shiny and nice; you’re not buying anything that gives you bragging rights, nothing to enjoy on a nice day, or to show off to your friends.  What you are buying is a contract – a packet of paper that is a promise to pay in the event certain types of loss occur.  It should provide you with security and the knowledge that it will protect you should catastrophe strike. 

“So…why not shop for the lowest price?  After all, all auto insurance policies cover the same types of loss, don’t they”?

That’s true – for the most part.  The law requires all Michigan Auto Insurance policies to include residual bodily injury and property damage liability, personal injury protection, and property protection insurance.  Insurance companies also offer optional coverages like comprehensive, collision and a host of other things.  The question isn’t always what they cover, but how the coverage applies.  You have, no doubt, heard the phrase, “the devil is in the details”.  Car insurance is no different.  There are some “behind-the-scenes” things lurking within the policy wording that vary from one policy to the next – things that aren’t on the declarations page and certainly are not obvious…that is, until you experience a loss that your insurance company does not cover and another may have. These seemingly subtle differences buried within the Insurance Fine Print can cost you a lot of money should the right (or should we say, wrong) set of circumstances come your way.

But first, a little lesson on “Understanding your Michigan Auto Insurance Policy 101”.  Trying to read and understand any insurance policy can be frustrating unless there is a basic understanding of how a policy is constructed.  A typical Personal Auto Policy is divided into at least six major sections (Liability Coverage, Medical Payments Coverage, Uninsured Motorists Coverage, Coverage for Damage to Your Auto, Duties After an Accident or Loss, and General Provisions).  Each coverage section is almost like its own little policy within a policy and each has its own insuring agreement, definitions and exclusions.  It is important to know which section is being discussed to understand how coverage applies. 

With that said, this article focuses on how Personal Auto Policies can vary with respect to the way they address certain types of business uses of a vehicle – how not all auto insurance policies are created equally!  We’ll begin by saying that, with very limited exception, vehicles used in the course of business are not eligible to be insured on a Personal Auto Policy.  A Business Auto Policy may be a better fit because language in the personal auto policy could leave a person completely without insurance if a vehicle is being used outside of the policy’s boundaries.  This is not something you want to learn after the loss!

For purposes of our comparison, we examined the Personal Auto Policy from six Michigan insurance companies.  Five out of the six policies contain the following exclusionary wording in the Liability Coverage section: “We do not provide Liability Coverage for any “insured” for that “insured’s” liability arising out of the ownership or operation of a vehicle while it is being used as a public or livery conveyance.  This exclusion (A.5.) does not apply to a share-the-expense car pool.  In insurance lingo, a “public” auto is a vehicle used to transport people for a fee. Taxis, limousines, airport shuttles, buses are examples of public autos.  The term “livery” is a broader – it includes the use of a vehicle for the transportation of people or goods.  Stated another way, when money is received for moving people or goods from one place to another, the vehicle should be covered by a Business Auto Policy.  On the other hand, if a vehicle is used only to get you or the tools of your trade to the place where you earn money, you are probably OK with the Personal Auto Policy.  There may be other considerations, but this should act as a good rule of thumb. 

Do you ever volunteer for your church or other non-profit organization where you may give someone a ride to the airport, pick up people for church or give a fellow member or a friend a ride to a doctor’s appointment? If your policy contains wording like the above, it is possible that you might not have coverage while using your car for this purpose!  Some of the policies we reviewed (but not all) have modified the above exclusion to allow for this type of vehicle use by adding the following words:  “…or to use the insured car for volunteer or charitable purposes or for which reimbursement for normal operating expenses is received.”  Another company adds even better wording by saying: “…nor does it apply when the vehicle is used for non-remunerative volunteer or charitable purposes or for which the person is reimbursed for normal operating expenses.”  At first glance, this whole exclusion may sound trite.  But the fact that it contains an exception for a cost-sharing car pool or, in some cases, volunteer work, should be a clear indication that it is intended to apply in a wide variety of circumstances.  Imagine being involved in a serious accident while volunteering and being sued for an enormous amount of money only to learn that you have no coverage.  That could certainly ruin your entire day!

Now… think of this.  Have you or someone in the household ever had a paper route and used the family car to make deliveries?  Have you ever thought of taking a job delivering sandwiches or pizza?  You may want discuss this with your insurance agent before taking that job.  Many insurance companies interpret these uses of a vehicle to be “livery”.  In these examples you are being paid for driving which makes this commercial use of your vehicle.  One very popular insurance company takes this exclusion a step further to make their intent crystal clear.  The exclusion in the liability section of their policy says:  “Coverage under this Part I, including our duty to defend, will not apply to any insured person for bodily injury or property damage arising out of the ownership, maintenance or use of any vehicle or trailer while being used to carry persons or property for compensation or a fee, including, but not limited to, pickup or delivery of magazines, newspapers, food or any other products.  This exclusion does not apply to shared-expense car pools”. 

The wording for these exclusions was taken from the Liability Coverage section of the policies but it is important to note that similar exclusions also appear in each of the other coverage sections throughout the policy.

The whole point of writing this article is to emphasize that not all Personal Auto Policies are the same.  Much lies within the “Insurance Fine Print”.  When shopping for auto insurance, price should not be the only deciding factor.  Our advice is to work with a knowledgeable Independent Insurance Agent that can find the policy best suited for your particular circumstances and needs. 

Insurance Planning Service is an independent insurance agency offering a full range of insurance products – auto – home – business – life – health – to individuals, families and businesses throughout Michigan.  Call or visit us on the web today for a quote on your insurance!

734.421.9900  |  800.220.5582  |  www.ipsagency.com

 

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Teen drivers: A parent’s guide

Teen DriverAdding a teenage driver to your car insurance policy will raise your rates. But you can control how much they’ll climb.

Having teens drive a Camry rather than a Corvette, encouraging them to make good grades, and urging them to keep their driving records clean can all have a major impact on rates.

“Putting your teen in a big, boring vehicle is going to be a lot easier on the wallet than giving them the zippy small car they may want,” says Russ Rader, spokesman for the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.

There is a reason teenagers cost more to insure.

New drivers are among the most dangerous on the road, racking up tickets and accidents at rates several times the rate of a typical driver.

A teenager does not have to drive. Bicycles and bus passes are cheaper, if you live in a place where that’s feasible.  But if it’s not, here is what every parent needs to know about the cheapest ways to insure a teenager.

Yes, you have to insure your teen driver

Virtually every insurer will require that all licensed family members in a household be included on your policy, whether they drive your cars or not. You should let the insurer know when the child gets his or her learner’s permit, but typically the teen isn’t listed (or your policy charged) until he or she is licensed.

If you are divorced and have only part-time custody of your child, you’ll have to consult your insurance company. Each company has its own rules. The best case is that the parent with primary custody adds the new driver; the worst case is that both parents do.

The only way to avoid paying the premium for a teenage driver on your own car is a named exclusion. Through an endorsement to your policy, you and your insurer agree that the driver is not covered. Any claim caused by that driver isn’t covered, either.

Your teen could insure his or her own car, but state laws governing teen ownership of cars differ widely. In general, a minor cannot own property or sign contracts, such as an insurance agreement, without a parent’s consent and signature.

It is almost always cheaper to add teenagers to an existing policy than to exclude them and instead buy an additional car and insure that, says CarInsurance.com consumer analyst Penny Gusner.

Not-so-hot wheels

If your household has several cars, it can help to have your new driver assigned to a specific one — the one that’s cheapest to insure.

If your child will have a car of his or her own, one place to start when looking for a car is the IIHS website, which lists insurance losses by make and model for vehicles built prior to 2010. Those vehicles with lower auto insurance losses will typically have lower auto insurance rates, while providing more protection if your teen is in a crash, Rader says.

The site also has a listing of the IIHS’s top safety picks for 2011 and older model years.

June Walbert, a Certified Financial Planner for USAA, says a vehicle with a “bigger, faster engine costs more money to insure and more money to repair.”

And just having a car with a powerful engine can be a temptation, Walbert says. “If you have that kind of power available, perhaps you’ll use it.” Instead, she recommends four-door sedans and crossover vehicles.

Insurance Planning Service is an independent insurance agency offering a full range of insurance products – auto – home – business – life – health – to individuals, families and businesses throughout Michigan.  Call or visit us on the web today for a quote on your insurance!

734.421.9900  |  800.220.5582  |  www.ipsagency.com

Courtesy: Carinsurance.com, MSN Money

 
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Posted by on January 26, 2012 in Auto, Uncategorized

 

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Driving in Snow and Ice

Winter DrivingThe best advice for driving in bad winter weather is not to drive at all, if you can avoid it.

Don’t go out until the snow plows and sanding trucks have had a chance to do their work, and allow yourself extra time to reach your destination.

If you must drive in snowy conditions, make sure your car is prepared (TIPS), and that you know how to handle road conditions.

It’s helpful to practice winter driving techniques in a snowy, open parking lot, so you’re familiar with how your car handles. Consult your owner’s manual for tips specific to your vehicle.

Driving safely on icy roads

  1. Decrease your speed and leave yourself plenty of room to stop. You should allow at least three times more space than usual between you and the car in front of you.
  2. Brake gently to avoid skidding. If your wheels start to lock up, ease off the brake.
  3. Turn on your lights to increase your visibility to other motorists.
  4. Keep your lights and windshield clean.
  5. Use low gears to keep traction, especially on hills.
  6. Don’t use cruise control or overdrive on icy roads.
  7. Be especially careful on bridges, overpasses and infrequently traveled roads, which will freeze first. Even at temperatures above freezing, if the conditions are wet, you might encounter ice in shady areas or on exposed roadways like bridges.
  8. Don’t pass snow plows and sanding trucks. The drivers have limited visibility, and you’re likely to find the road in front of them worse than the road behind.
  9. Don’t assume your vehicle can handle all conditions. Even four-wheel and front-wheel drive vehicles can encounter trouble on winter roads.

If your rear wheels skid…

  1. Take your foot off the accelerator.
  2. Steer in the direction you want the front wheels to go. If your rear wheels are sliding left, steer left. If they’re sliding right, steer right.
  3. If your rear wheels start sliding the other way as you recover, ease the steering wheel toward that side. You might have to steer left and right a few times to get your vehicle completely under control.
  4. If you have standard brakes, pump them gently.
  5. If you have anti-lock brakes (ABS), do not pump the brakes. Apply steady pressure to the brakes. You will feel the brakes pulse — this is normal.

If your front wheels skid…

  1. Take your foot off the gas and shift to neutral, but don’t try to steer immediately.
  2. As the wheels skid sideways, they will slow the vehicle and traction will return. As it does, steer in the direction you want to go. Then put the transmission in “drive” or release the clutch, and accelerate gently.

If you get stuck…

  1. Do not spin your wheels. This will only dig you in deeper.
  2. Turn your wheels from side to side a few times to push snow out of the way.
  3. Use a light touch on the gas, to ease your car out.
  4. Use a shovel to clear snow away from the wheels and the underside of the car.
  5. Pour sand, kitty litter, gravel or salt in the path of the wheels, to help get traction.
  6. Try rocking the vehicle. (Check your owner’s manual first — it can damage the transmission on some vehicles.) Shift from forward to reverse, and back again. Each time you’re in gear, give a light touch on the gas until the vehicle gets going.

We at Insurance Planning Service wish you a safe winter season.  Call us at 800-220-5582 to be sure you have adequate insurance coverage or to receive a free Michigan Auto Insurance quote. 

Courtesy: Weather.com

 
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Posted by on December 28, 2011 in Auto, Uncategorized, Weather

 

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How to Find the Right Balance Between Auto Insurance Limits and Deductibles

Michigan Auto InsuranceThe goal of insurance is to take some of the risk you are exposed to every day off your shoulders. You pay the insurance company and, in turn, they accept the risk that you might have an accident and agree to pay a certain amount.

Auto insurance often offers a sort of shared risk. Deductibles and limits divide the risk to make certain some of the risk is yours, and some of the risk belongs to your insurance carrier.

Deductibles are the amount of damages you’re responsible for before your carrier pays out. If the cost of your damage does not exceed your deductible, however, you’re responsible for the full amount.

Limits are the maximum amount that your insurance company will pay toward a claim. Any additional liability above your policy limits is your responsibility, unless you have an umbrella policy.

Setting higher deductibles and lower limits, allows your insurance company to assume less risk. By your carrier assuming less risk, your premiums may be significantly lower. In the event of an accident, your financial responsibility may be greater since you have an aggressive deductible and lower limits to make up for.

Ultimately, when using deductibles and limits to create an affordable auto insurance policy, you want to make sure you find the right balance.

  • Can you afford the deductible? You should be able to pay your deductible without going into debt or having to remove the money from an account with penalties for early withdrawal.
  • Do you have resources for claims that exceed limits? If you have a claim that exceeds the limits of your policy, you should try to pay the claim with funds that are readily available to you.
  • Is it worth the risk? Finally, make sure you perform many policy comparisons with lower deductibles and higher limits to make sure that your premium savings are really worth the increased exposure you have. Consider the changes in premium that these adjustments bring and then consider the amount of money you will need in reserves to pay your additional responsibility.

Shopping for auto insurance is not just about finding the lowest premium. With a little finesse, you and your agent can design a plan with an affordable premium that offers you the coverage you need.Call us today at 800-220-5582 for more information or get a free Michigan auto insurance quote.

JG

 

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New Year’s Resolutions That Could Reduce Your Insurance Rates

If mere satisfaction from improving your lifestyle doesn’t motivate you enough to keep New Year’s resolutions, New Year's Resolutionsconsider how making positive changes might fatten your wallet.

Here are six resolutions that could lower your insurance rates.

1. Lose weight

If you’re among the two-thirds of Americans who are overweight or obese, losing weight could qualify you for lower life insurance rates. That’s true whether you’re applying for a new policy or already have life insurance.

Louis J. Cassara, chairman and CEO of the Financial Resource Network in the Chicago area, says several of his formerly overweight clients who slimmed down through healthy diet and exercise programs were able to get reconsideration of their life insurance rating classes on existing policies. The strategy reduced costs of their permanent life insurance policies, allowing more money to go into cash value, says Cassara, a Chartered Life Underwriter and Chartered Financial Consultant.

“You can save 5 percent to 15 percent on the cost of insurance by being in good shape,” he says.

Not all life insurance companies allow existing policyholders to apply for better rating classes. Ask your life insurance agent for details.

2. Quit smoking

“Smoking dramatically increases the cost of insurance, particularly for term life insurance,” Cassara says.

Smoking also raises premiums for permanent life insurance, such as whole and universal life, as well as disability and long-term care insurance.

Most life insurance companies require you to be tobacco-free for at least 12 months to qualify as a nonsmoker, but John Hancock offers a “quit smoking incentive” program for its universal life and variable universal life products.

Cassara says the John Hancock program lets smokers who intend to quit smoking qualify for standard nonsmoker rates for three years. They get to keep the nonsmoker rate permanently if during the three years they show evidence they quit smoking for at least 12 months.

3. Make your home safer

Ask your homeowners insurance company or agent about safety and security discounts.

“It could be something as simple as installing deadbolts on doors or putting in better locks on windows, up to installing a security system with remote monitoring,” says Tully Lehman, a spokesperson for the Insurance Information Network of California.

Consider upgrades for fire safety, too, such as replacing an old wood shingle roof with a roof made from fire-safe materials.

4. Improve your credit

Insurance companies in some states can use credit information as a factor in setting car and home insurance premiums. People with good credit get lower rates than those with poor credit histories. To improve your credit, request free copies of your credit reports through annualcreditreport.com and follow instructions to correct any factual errors. Then, catch up on late payments to creditors, pay your bills on time and keep credit card balances under 30 percent of credit limits. Not all states, however, use credit history information when setting rates.

5. Drive less, drive gently – if you can

Insurance companies offer pay-as-you-drive programs in a growing number of states. Examples are Progressive’s Snapshot and State Farm’s In-Drive. By enrolling in these programs, you agree to have your car’s mileage and your driving performance tracked through a telematics device installed in your vehicle.

The device monitors how far you drive and when, how fast you accelerate and turn, and how hard you brake. If you qualify by meeting certain criteria — not driving during peak hours, not driving more than 12,000 miles in a year and not taking turns too fast or braking too hard — you can receive a reduction in your car insurance rate.

6. Turn off your cell phone while driving

Ditching your phone while driving may not directly lower car insurance rates, but it may help prevent accidents and traffic tickets, which can increase premiums. Recently, the National Transportation Safety Board recommended a nationwide ban on the use of cell phones and text messaging devices while driving. If adopted by all states, it would be illegal to use a phone while driving, even if you used accessories that allowed you talk on the phone without using your hands.

Currently, the use of mobile devices while driving is governed by state laws with varying degrees of scope. Some states ban all use of handheld cell phones while driving, others prohibit just novice drivers from using cell phones behind the wheel. Meanwhile, some states ban only text messaging while driving. Regardless of what the laws are in your state, safety experts say it’s best to stay focused on the road rather than talk on the phone and drive.

“No matter how good you think you are at multi-tasking, having a conversation on a mobile phone while driving distracts you from safely controlling your car,” says Dave Melton, a driving safety expert with Liberty Mutual Insurance and managing director of global safety. “Talking on a hands-free device makes absolutely no difference. You are distracted when you talk while driving.”

Using a cell phone behind the wheel also teaches kids that it’s OK to do so, no matter how often you tell them not to text or talk on the phone while driving.

“And the problem gets worse for teens and novice drivers who are [at] greater risk because they lack driving experience and may not recognize their own level of distraction or appreciate risky driving situations,” Melton says.

Insurance Planning Service is an independent insurance agency offering a full range of insurance products – auto – home – business – life – health – to individuals, families and businesses throughout Michigan.  Call or visit us on the web today for a quote on your insurance!

734.421.9900  |  800.220.5582  |  www.ipsagency.com

Courtesy: Fox Personal Finance

 

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