kev_Makaveli wrote: » Gender. Male Age. 35 Licence. 12 years. Full. Car. 2010 Vauxhall Insignia 2.0 Diesel. FNCB. 7 years. Points. 0 Cover Required. Fully Comp Last year: €450 Mccarthy Insurance Renew Quote. €850!!!!! Looked around and managed to get €483 from another broker.
kh8 wrote: » up to what ltr can u drive up to
mhackett102 wrote: » Just paid for it there. The woman on the phone said the engine drive can be unlimited, just once the car has valid tax & nct, and is insured and registered in someone else's name that is not my own.
Xcellor wrote: » Well pissed off the cheapest I could get was 685 with BOI but my renewal is like 715 so not even really worth switching... Full NCB, 10+ driving license, 33 years old driving a 02 1.6 Toyota avensis. Have 2 more days to find something cheaper, already paid out 715 but have cooling off period. Not looking to good at this point.
Kristopherus wrote: » I thought you could pay BOI by instalments at no extra cost.
from_atozinc wrote: » just wrecks my head, any body else get their quote lately where it has increased?
ba_barabus wrote: » Quote: €563 Last year I paid €515 fully comp Can't even get a quote near that to try and drive it down
Stray Cat wrote: » Gender: Male Age: 39 Car: Nissan Primastar 1.9 Year: 2006 Claims: 0 Points: 0 License: 14 Years Full Cover: Fully Comp Last Year: Kennco €428 This Year: Kennco €100.74 (Third Party) Only 2 companies would price as the rest said i was un-insurable ...im a photographer hardly a stunt car driver.... 10 yrs NCB is worth nothing...
Stray Cat wrote: » Oh and to follow i was only quoted by 2 companies as i work as a photographer and for some bizarre reason they think i double as a stunt car driver as the rest wouldn't even quote me,chill said unless i was a farmer or trades person they didnt want to know!! Be interesting to see what the regulator thinks about that....
Insurance products Insurance companies can sell their products throughout the EU – either by establishing themselves in other countries or providing their services across borders directly or through intermediaries. You can therefore shop around the European market for the best deals on insurance products (life insurance, household insurance, car insurance and so on). This only concerns private insurance and occupational pension funds and not your social security and statutory pension rights relating to your work history. When you buy from an insurer in another EU country, the authorities responsible for regulating insurance in that country and in your own country will share information on: the level of risk involved in the insurance you plan to buy the insurer's solvency the types of risk for which the insurer is authorised in the country where it is based. Most insurance products are sold through insurance intermediaries (brokers, agents). They must provide you with certain essential information before any contract is signed, including: their links to the insurance companies whether they are acting as an agent or broker. They should also clearly state in writing: your insurance requests and needs the reasons for any advice they give you on the insurance product. On the basis of this information, you can decide whether the proposed insurance contract is the right choice for you.