Showing posts with label ways. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ways. Show all posts

Monday, January 27, 2014

7 ways cheap car insurance can backfire

7 ways cheap car insurance can backfire
| By Barbara Marquand, Insurance.com

When it comes to auto insurance, sometimes you get what you pay for -- and if you're not paying a lot, you might regret it.

Everybody wants lower car insurance rates, but you could wind up sorry if you shop by price alone.

Skimping on coverage can leave you financially exposed and wishing you had spent more for better protection and service.

"Don't shortchange yourself," says Anna Molin, an independent insurance agent with Huntington & Wheatsworth in Towaco, N.J. "In the long run, it's not worth it, and it's really not that much more to get something decent."

That doesn't mean you ignore price. But when comparing car insurance quotes and policies, make sure you compare apples to apples.

"People think they're comparing apples to apples, but sometimes those apples are rotten," says Addison Gardner, owner of The Gardner Insurance Group in Oklahoma City.

Here are seven ways cheap car insurance can backfire:

Most states require you to have liability insurance, but the minimum amounts you have to buy are low.

California's minimum liability limits of 15/30/5 were set in 1967, says Tully Lehman, a spokesperson for the Insurance Information Network of California. (That's $15,000 per person for bodily injury liability, $30,000 for bodily injury per accident and $5,000 for property damage.)

"You can exceed that $5,000 limit very quickly," he says. "The same goes for bodily injury."

Once the limits are exceeded, you're on the hook for paying damage or injuries you cause, and accident victims can sue you for your assets.

Gardner says he runs into a lot of consumers who got sold a cheap policy and were told they had "full coverage." But actually they had only the bare-minimum liability insurance with some collision and comprehensive coverage.

"If you own a $200,000 house and you hit someone with a $100,000 Mercedes, guess where the lawyers are going to dip to get the money?" he says.

Raising the deductible on collision and comprehensive insurance is one way to lower premiums, and it's preferable to forgoing collision and comprehensive altogether if you have a car with some value, Molin says.

But don't raise the deductible so high that you can't afford to pay it when your car needs repairs.

In some states, some non-standard car insurance policies contain exclusions in the fine print, says Penny Gusner, consumer analyst for CarInsurance.com. These are policies promoted as cheap coverage for risky drivers.

For instance, unlike most standard policies, some no-frills policies don't extend coverage to rental cars, and they don't automatically extend coverage to a new car when you replace your vehicle. (With a standard policy, your current insurance typically extends to a replacement vehicle, although you're required to notify your insurer within a certain timeframe, usually 14 to 30 days, after buying a car.)

With a cheap policy you might get dinged harder for minor violations or accidents than you would with other policies, Gusner says. That means you'll pay higher premiums at renewal time, and the cheap policy might end up costing you more in the long run.

Check out the reputation of an insurance company before buying. Many state insurance departments post information about complaints against insurance companies.

"Ask yourself if the company is going to have your best interests at heart when it comes time to file a claim," says Lehman.

Molin says beware of companies you've never heard of.

Options like rental car reimbursement and emergency roadside service don't cost that much, but they can come in awfully handy. Rental car reimbursement pays for a rental car while your vehicle is in the shop after a covered accident. Emergency roadside service pays for towing and service if your car breaks down or you lock yourself out.

James Kuryak, principal of Niagara National Insurance in Buffalo, N.Y., says too often customers who buy a healthy amount of liability insurance to protect their assets skimp on uninsured motorist coverage. This insurance covers you, the insured members of your household and passengers for injuries or death when an uninsured or hit-and-run driver causes an accident. Kuryak recommends bumping up uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage to the limits of your liability insurance.

He also suggests increasing personal injury protection insurance if you're in a no-fault state and you routinely shuttle around a lot of passengers, such as your kids' friends to soccer practice or school.

Overall, Kuryak says, review your car insurance coverage periodically to make sure it's sufficient for your life situation today.

"At the time of an accident no one thinks about what they paid for insurance anymore," he says. "It's all about what coverage you have."

Friday, August 10, 2012

10 savvy ways to save on gas

While we all probably the basis to do so, as know to save - money on gas not crank AC (as if the an option this summer is!), not tool city here are some aimless (duh!) - lesser-known options, the cost of gas this summer cutting:

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1. Buy cheap gas gift cards
Sites like PlasticJungle.com and GiftCardGranny.com sometimes to sell cheap gas gift cards for gas stations like shell, Gulf, and mobile. This means you get a gas card in the value of, say, $100 but only around $95 for it could pay. That is $5 in free gas!

2. Drive like a sensible person
Sure, you can make crazy traffic jams, slow drivers on the left lane and rubber Eckers. But how quickly speed up - costs, says "drive angry" - Kelli grant, the senior consumer reporter for DowJones. "If you away peel from a traffic light, as they will in the Indy 500, you pay for it," she says. In fact in a test by Edmunds cutting of green light slowly speed up and gradually stop for a red light fuel consumption for someone driving a Land Rover by more than 35 percent and for a Mustang more than 27 percent. In addition, the study found that cruise is the way to go on the Highway: A Land Rover has around 14 percent better mileage with cruise control set at 70 km/h compared to a driver cruises between speeds of 65 and 75 mph; The Mustang had gone better it 4.5 percent.

3. Strategically time your trips to the pump
During a normal week on Wednesday or Thursday before 10, your tank be filled to, Chris Faulkner, President and CEO of Breitling says oil and natural gas, a Dallas-based independent oil and gas exploration and production company. The reason: "gas prices rise on Thursday in advance to weekend travel" and "10 is the most station change their price of the owner making", he writes. ", If it's an emergency, not you buy gas, Friday, Saturday or Sunday." During the holidays, some experts say could increase prices in anticipation of more riders on the road.

4. Use your smartphone
The AAA TripTik or GasBuddy apps use to find the cheapest gas in your area, says grant. Can your phone (the maps app on the iPhone shows you traffic), the movement to check before you leave the House, so that you are wasting gas backtracking and can avoid idle.

5. Consider a gas rewards card (even a could offer your supermarket)
If you drive much, it can perform useful, so a credit card to get rewarded for buying gas. To see if it makes sense for you, see NerdWallet.com, where you will enter in your spending, and will recommend it to good credit cards for you. (NerdWallet.com started just a site for cheap gas in the area find.) It should be noted that the most rewards take cards but high-interest, so these cards are likely unless you pay from your credit completely each month not the right place for you (instead look for a low interest card). In addition "grocery chains such as Safeway, Kroger and Winn-Dixie gasoline rewards program, offer," says Jim Toedtman, editor of the AARP Bulletin, which save a list of gas tips published. He adds "get friends and family, the map to share, so that points accumulate faster,". However, says it is important that the price at the pump might be best price is not, so even with the savings it is not the best deal, grant.

6. Let not the engine idle too long
"Not letting your car idle if you will it warm or you are quiet," Faulkner writes. "If you're going to stand for more than a minute wasted your engine running more gas than to restarting the engine."

7. Pay correctly
Some gas stations free of charge a premium credit card to pay to compensate for the service fee, the credit card companies them free of charge. So, if you want to pay by credit card or direct debit, "service stations search where cash costs to pay the same as with a credit or debit card," says Faulkner. Double your car an attendant filling have, ask him to ensure that "when you pay cash, that 'Money' on the pump, noted he adds.""You lose 'Credit' were $.05 per gallon, when he accidentally presses."

8. Have the right care
Keep your tires filled with air and you can save your clean air filter size. "To reduce under-inflated tire gas mileage and can affect the handling, braking and tread life," says Robert Campbell, Senior VP of operations for express oil change & service center. The reason: "If your tires not enough air in them, their rolling resistance dramatically increases and it takes more gas to get anywhere," Faulkner said. In fact, you could improve your gas mileage by up to 3.3 per cent hold pumped up your tires to the correct pressure after the Department of energy. Moreover, "Cleaning the air filter your gas mileage can improve in your car up to 7 percent, which can equate to a saving of over $72 for all 10,000 miles," says financial consulting, LLC Xavier EPPs, the founder and financial consultant at XNE.

9. Picky where - and how - you recharge your batteries

"The cheap gas station on the side of the highway avoid how you drive home from work, which can be up to $0.15 per gallon more," says Faulkner. And although warehouse clubs like Costco have gas often low prices, they do not always - so make sure that gas-app (see tip # number) before you fill just automatically up there, grant says. In addition go premium gas not just automatically with the. "Confirm what octane engine of your car really needs gasoline, with your mechanic" says Faulkner. "" The most car engines gasoline does not require even though the manual will tell"is recommended."

10 Not tote around your entire home
OK, this sounds obvious, but people often remember what is in their car not. Conclusion: not lug around a bunch of crap in the car, how "everybody eats 250 pounds an extra mile per gallon gasoline," says Faulkner.

You are looking for more tips on how to get money on gas save this piece of moneycrashers.com.

© 2012 Forbes.com