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6 things you should know about your NCD

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Heard of the term “NCD”? It stands for “No-Claim Discount” – a big deal to anyone in Singapore who owns a car.

A No-Claim Discount is awarded annually by your insurer if you have not made any claim on your existing car insurance policy. This is your insurer’s way of recognising you for having been a careful driver.

While this is generally common information to most people, there may still be some details that are not as well known.

We’ve laid out the most important ones here for you.

 

1. How your No-Claim Discount works

The discounted percentage corresponds to the number of years the car owner has not made any claims from the insurance company.

So as long as you don’t make any claims in the first year of driving, you will earn your first 10% off your next renewal premium.  The following year it increases to 20% – and so on until it reaches a cap of 50%.

 

2. NCD applies to you, not your vehicle.

Your No-Claim Discount is earned on a “per car” basis. So if you have 50% NCD on Car A and then buy an additional car, you’ll have 0% NCD on that second vehicle.

Another scenario: you have 50% NCD on Car A and sell it to buy Car B. You’ll still keep that 50% NCD on the new car.

 

3. How much your NCD is reduced depends on the insurer.

The market practice is to impose a 30% reduction for each and every “at fault” claim.

Aviva makes only a 10% reduction for the same. When your NCD is reduced, you will end up paying a higher premium than the previous year.

 

4. Making a claim does not mean you automatically lose your NCD!

If your insurer confirms that you’re not at fault, you will not lose your NCD. But if it is your fault, then your NCD may be reduced for every claim made.

 

5. You can protect your NCD!

There are a few ways to do it:

-By paying back the amount that your insurer has paid on your behalf

-By buying an NCD protector so that your NCD can be protected for one claim. If you make more than one claim, your NCD will then be reduced according to each insurer’s rate.

Fun fact:

In the past 6 months, 1 in 3 of Aviva’s car insurance customers bought the NCD protector rider!

 

6. What happens if you don’t have an NCD protector?

You lose your NCD. As mentioned, most insurers will impose a 30% reduction on your NCD for each and every claim.

Earning back this 30% on your NCD will require a 3-year claims-free period.

 

Now that you know how an NCD works, you might want to consider protecting yours when you renew your car insurance or by adding it on as a rider when you get a new car insurance quote

The post 6 things you should know about your NCD appeared first on Money Banter.


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