Young drivers face £3,000 cost for car insurance

10 months ago 75
ARTICLE AD BOX

Young driverImage source, Getty Images

Young drivers have been hit hardest by the highest car insurance costs on record, with some facing premiums of nearly £3,000, according to data.

Confused.com, the price comparison firm, said on average 17-20-year-olds had seen insurance rise by more than £1,000 from the same time last year.

Overall, on average drivers face paying 58% more on car insurance compared to last January.

Confused.com blamed a post-Covid increase in claims and higher costs.

Steve Dukes, chief executive of Confused.com, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "The frequency in claims is up in the last couple of years, since the pandemic, but also the cost of them.

"The cost of second-hand cars is higher than they used to be, the cost of parts, the cost of labour to make repairs - and that's all being passed onto consumers."

Confused.com said it was a "really tough time" for motorists.

Average price rises for car insurance across all drivers rose by £366 to £995.

But younger drivers faced the sharpest jump. For 17-year-olds, premiums surged by an average £1,423, to £2,877. For 18-year-old drivers, the average policy price reached £3,162.

The data is calculated on an average of the best five quotes received on Confused.com, rather than prices actually paid for policies.

Mr Dukes said there are ways to reduce premiums. "Where they can legitimately share the driving with an older driver with more experience and add that person as a named driver, that can have a really significant effect and bring the price down by hundreds of pounds, that's really worth looking at," he said.

Mr Dukes also suggested younger motorists explore the use of telematics, or "pay how you drive" insurance, where their behaviour on the road is shared with the underlying insurance or occasional drivers insurance.

But he said with the price rises for 17-20-year-olds many young drivers would be looking at whether they can afford to drive at all.

"The industry has to be careful not to push younger drivers into other modes of transport and that's a real risk when prices get this high," he said.

The BBC has approached the Association of British Insurers for comment.

Read Entire Article