
Got a great tip? Share it with us. You know, stuff like "Prevent sneezing by pressing you index finger firmly between your nose and your upper lip."
( , Wed 29 Nov 2006, 16:33)
« Go Back

Try putting a woman as a named driver on your insurance. I do this every time and it lowers it by a considerable margin. This year for example the woman I have put on mine has 6 points and an outstanding claim against her for rear ending someone and I still saved £60 on what they quoted when it was just me. Might not work for everyone but it always seems to lower mine.
( , Wed 9 Dec 2009, 10:13, 6 replies, latest was 15 years ago)

I remember checking my policy renewal one year and seeing an ex still listed as a named driver. Wanting to break all links with my past life (and possibly save some money), I phoned to get her name removed, only to be told it was cheaper to leave her on, despite her being responsible for the only "at fault" claim I've ever had to make. So, for a couple of years, my ex could still legally drive my car, though she never knew this.
The explanation I was given was that if you have another listed driver you might share the driving if one of you is tired, so are then less likely to have an accident. Presumably they'd have to be over 25 to lower your premium rather than raise it, and there may be some advantage to the extra driver being a woman, though it may also work adding a male to a female's policy.
By the way, despite often being able to get lower insurance premiums, women aren't necessarily better drivers. It's just that on average they drive fewer miles each year, and on average their journeys are at lower speeds, so on average their insurance claims are lower. That's what's important to the insurance company when giving a quote. Though feel free to add any anecdotal "men drive like nutters"/"women can't park" comments below.
( , Thu 10 Dec 2009, 11:47, Reply)

at defensive driving than men IMO.
However, they're far more inconsiderate. In my experience they hardly ever let me out of side roads or stop to let me turn right in front of them down a side road. It's not like I drive a BMW or anything. And if I let a woman driver out of a side-road etc, it's only in about 1/10 occasions where I get any form of aknowledgement, compared to say 8/10 for men.
And I've never known a taxi driver to not let me out of a side-road when the traffic's bad.
( , Thu 10 Dec 2009, 22:35, Reply)

reports exactly the same thing. And she always lets people out.
( , Sat 19 Dec 2009, 20:08, Reply)

Women abandon their cars in the snow, whilst us Men drive on, where we have accidents because we hit these abandoned cars. Where it is then the mans fault as we should have seen these extra obstacles on the slip road of a motorway, which have been parked with the fucking doors open.
( , Thu 31 Dec 2009, 10:55, Reply)
« Go Back