Posts Tagged ‘Gas Prices’

How High Gas Prices Can Lead to Lower Auto Insurance Rates

January 28th, 2010

our neighbors would just drive even less, we’d get lower auto insurance rates.

And that could be in the process of happening. When Americans spend less time on the road, the frequency of auto accidents declines. And when auto accidents go down, so do claims on auto insurance. That gets the ball rolling: When auto insurance companies see their costs on claims declining steadily, they typically respond to market conditions by lowering their auto insurance quotes and, ultimately auto insurance rates in a bid to stay competitive. And voila!, we write smaller checks for our auto insurance premiums.

With run-away gas prices, Americans are already driving less. The Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) reported in May 2008 that Americans are driving at “historic lows.” The estimated “vehicle miles traveled,” or VMT, for March 2008 fell 4.3 percent compared to March 2007, making it the sharpest dip for any month since the FHWA began tracking traffic-volume trends in 1942. Want to follow driving trends? The FHWA publishes monthly “Traffic Volume Trends.”

When auto accident claims go down, auto insurance companies can usually respond fairly quickly. To adjust premiums, they must file new auto insurance rates with every state in which they operate. They can file new auto insurance rates any time they want to respond to market conditions, and many states offer a “file and use” system, where auto insurance companies can file new auto insurance rates and begin using them immediately without prior approval from the state insurance department. Some states even have a “use and file” system, so insurers can implement new auto insurance rates and then officially file them shortly thereafter. This way auto insurance companies can begin passing on savings (or increases) right away.

The nation’s largest auto insurance companies are the first to see trends in accidents and claims payments due to the sheer volume of their claims data. For example, State Farm, the nation’s largest auto insurance company, handles about 19 million auto insurance claims a year (that’s a little over 17 claims per minute, all day, every day).

Robert Passmore, Director of Personal Lines for Property Casualty Insurers Association of America (PCIAA), an industry trade group, says, “This is where you see competition kick in.” He notes that if you live in a state that requires “prior approval,” it would take a longer time to see rate reductions. That means Californians and New Yorkers could be tapping their toes waiting for auto insurance rate reductions while everyone else pockets savings.

Auto insurance companies also note that auto insurance rates have been holding steady or declining over the past few years anyway. For example, State Farm customers in all states have seen rate reductions between Jan. 1, 2004, and Dec. 31, 2007, and customers in 39 of those states saw double-digit percentage rate decreases. (State Farm policyholders in New Jersey got the biggest drop of 29.19 percent.)

Passmore cautions that other factors could offset the trend in reduced driving  specifically, medical costs from bodily injury claims, legal costs relating to claims disputes and repair costs that are, for now, rising faster than the rate at which auto accident claims are going down.

Darn those repair, medical and legal costs! If it weren’t for those, drivers could already be seeing lower auto insurance rates (as we sit at home). However, auto insurance companies generally agree that if we see significant auto accident reductions, lower auto insurance rates won’t be too far behind.

Perhaps at the $6-a-gallon mark?

Will reduced driving mean lower auto insurance rates?

Insure.com asked the nation’s top auto insurance companies whether high gas prices and reduced driving are translating to lower auto insurance rates yet. Here are their answers.

State Farm spokesperson Dick Luedke notes that State Farm auto insurance rates have been on the decline nationwide since 2004, but reduced auto accident claims are not yet leading directly to further auto insurance rate reductions: “Our actuaries look at claims data not just to see the recent past, but also to see what might change the future, like gas prices.”

Luedke says there’s no hard and fast rule as to what level of auto accident reduction would spark lower auto insurance rates, but says, “If we saw a reduction as big as 10 percent in accident frequency, we would have reacted long before that.”

Allstate spokesperson Kate Hollcraft says, “We have just recently seen a decline in automobile claim frequency and if this continues through the summer months, we would probably be able to attribute it to a rise in fuel costs.”

Progressive spokesperson Leah Knapp says, “We don’t speculate about future rate changes, but it would be accurate to say that we continuously review market and business conditions, including monitoring losses, so that we can ensure our policies are accurately priced everywhere we do business. When our analysis suggests our rates require adjustment, we may seek to either raise or lower rates accordingly.”

Nationwide Vice President & Policyholder, Standard Auto Product & Pricing, Larry Thursby, observes that “customers are having fewer accidents.” But he notes it’s been that way for a couple of years due to a variety of factors, like an aging population that becomes safer drivers, graduated licensing laws for teens and crackdowns in drunk driving. In addition, potential auto insurance rate reductions due to accident frequency are being offset by inflation in the usual suspects: medical and hospital costs, repair costs and legal costs.

Thursby says that Nationwide has been passing along cost savings by offering guaranteed renewability, lower surcharges and broader “forgiveness” for accidents, fender-benders and minor violations.




By: Amy Danise

Cheap Auto Rental: Tips For Getting Cheap Rates

November 28th, 2009

Consumers today are hard-pressed to find what can safely be called the best deal for any product, and most consumers are not willing to spend the time or effort searching for the absolute lowest possible price when making a purchase. This is also the situation with car rentals. Car rentals are becoming more and more expensive, as gas prices and inflation rise steadily. The following are several tips that can help you keep your car rental costs low, even as other factors cause prices to rise steadily.

1. Rent your car from internet car rental sites instead of doing it over-the-counter. Internet sites often offer discounts that over-the-counter car rental companies do not and you can make use of these discounts to lower the overall cost of your car rental and save a substantial amount of money.

2. In order to get your cheap auto rental, you should get the most value you can from it. You are usually required to fill the gas tank before you return your car, or the company will charge you for gas. You should fill the car with the cheapest gas you can find on the way to returning it, as the company will charge you relatively high prices for gas otherwise.

3. If possible, you should choose one car rental company and stick to it, as many car rental companies offer discounts or benefits to repeat customers.

4. You can sometimes exchange frequent flyer miles for cheap auto rentals. If you have frequent flyer miles that are on the verge of expiring, instead of letting them go to waste, you should use them to make your car rentals less expensive.

5. Car rental companies will often give you a discount if you reserve your car early, so you should always aim to do so.

6. You should also increase your chances of receiving a discount or free upgrade by going to collect your car early in the morning when most of the company’s cheap rental cars would not have been returned yet.

7. Packages that combine car rentals, airfares and lodging a good way not just to reduce the price of your car rental, but of your airfare and lodging as well. This will ensure that you get the most value for your money.

8. Some internet sites offer a rent-at-your-own-price service, where the company searches for the best possible deal that fits your budget. You should check the company’s history before you make a reservation, however, as some of them is not very reliable. Keep in mind that you will not be able to cancel your reservations once you have made them.

9. Car rental companies often have cheaper rates for weekly rentals so, if you are going to rent a car for more than five days, make sure you check to see if weekly rental rates are available at your rental company.

10. Picking up your rental car at the airport is more expensive due to airport surcharges and you will be better off picking the car up at the shop instead.




By: Marlon Dirk

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