Bought a car recently and the car came with 'free' 30 day gap insurance cover. The insurance company phoned and asked if I'm interested in further cover for two years. Is there any point in this on top of my fully comp car insurance?
I bought it rather than finance.Depends how risk adverse you are and the depreciation profile of the car you bought. assuming you bought rather than financed it when it becomes slightly more worthwhile, maybe
About £13k with a trade in.And also how much the car cost in the first place.
I must say I'm slightly baffled at the purpose of gap insurance on a vehicle which is owned outright. In the event of the car being written off your insurer should put you back into a similar/identical replacement. What exactly is the insurance covering in this instance?
Just been in the same position. The salesman made it clear (without actually saying so, of course!) that in his opinion it was a waste of money unless you’re paying a “nearly new” price
Should have made it clear, bought outright with no need for a loan.If you take a shortish (say 3 year) loan on a car 3+ years old it probably is fairly pointless. In my experience the car's value in that case tends to fairly closely follow the curve of the loan balance. It might be worth it on a 5 year or longer loan, and is probably more worth it on finance (which must be settled if written off) than on a personal loan (which you can still keep paying monthly until settled even if the vehicle no longer exists).
Should have made it clear, bought outright with no need for a loan.
On the other hand I've had unscrupulous salesmen trying to pressure me into gap insurance when buying outright, although I think at that point he was frustrated that I wasn't taking out finance and pointed out that I'd prefer to spend 5 minutes sat in the carpark arranging tax and insurance than pay the admin fee they'd tried to sneak in for them to arrange it.Just been in the same position. The salesman made it clear (without actually saying so, of course!) that in his opinion it was a waste of money unless you’re paying a “nearly new” price
AIUI, the idea of taking out gap insurance on a new car bought outright, is that if it's written off within the period of the insurance, the additional payout from the gap insurance will enable you to buy a new rather than used replacement. Otherwise it may be hard to find a like for like replacement, as not many used cars are available at say three or six months old, and any that are may be e.g. ex hire fleet rather than from a careful owner-driver.
That obviously would be less of an issue if the first car is previously used.
I don't know how widespread the coverage is there are standard insurance policies that will do this already up to a year, I have a standard policy with Directline and if I had a car less than a year old that was stolen or written off they would replace it with a new car the same make and model. You do have to be the first registered keeper so it wouldn't cover a nearly new car but a standard payout would likely cover a similar nearly new car since it's lost a chunk of money over a new one. I became aware of this on car forums on seeing a number of people having new cars written off and receiving a new one from the insurer.AIUI, the idea of taking out gap insurance on a new car bought outright, is that if it's written off within the period of the insurance, the additional payout from the gap insurance will enable you to buy a new rather than used replacement. Otherwise it may be hard to find a like for like replacement, as not many used cars are available at say three or six months old, and any that are may be e.g. ex hire fleet rather than from a careful owner-driver.
That obviously would be less of an issue if the first car is previously used.