Are you paying too much for auto insurance? You’re not alone as rates in Connecticut went up 8% last year and 20% since 2018 thanks to inflation, higher repair costs and riskier driving by too many drivers.
But now there’s a way to lower your rates significantly … if you are willing to let Big Brother monitor your driving habits online via Telematics. All of the major insurance companies are now employing this technology to better understand their customers’ driving style and reward good drivers.
When first launched almost 20
years ago this meant you’d have to plug a fob into your car’s OBD (on board
diagnostics) connection which would monitor how you drive for a few
months. You’d send the fob back to the
insurance company which would analyze the data and “rate” your policy. How much you drove (distance), how fast you
drove and when you drove would determine your premium.
Think of it this way:
If you were shopping for life
insurance you’d first have to take a physical exam. If you were in good health, didn’t smoke and
took care of yourself, the life insurance company would charge you less. But if you’re overweight, have a two-pack-day
habit and have high cholesterol, you’re a bigger risk and would be charged
more. So you had an incentive to stay in
good health, not only to live longer but pay less for life insurance.
Now drivers can do the same
thing… not with the old fob plug-in but just by downloading a smartphone app
which monitors your driving.
‘TrueLane’
is just such an app used by The Hartford, our hometown insurance company and
one of the bigger underwriters in the state.
I’ve been experimenting with the app for a few weeks and love it… but
still have some concerns.
Each time I drive the TrueLane
app knows where I drove, when and how I drove… scoring me on braking,
acceleration, cornering, speed and use of my phone while driving. It gives me a score and dings me for
offenses.
The neat thing is it shows on
a map where I may have braked too hard or took a corner too fast, teaching me
what I did wrong and, hopefully, improving my skills. My incentive:
a 12 – 25% premium discount if I maintain a score of 90% or better. So far, driving a Prius where acceleration is
already a challenge, I’m scoring about 97%.
But do I want Big Brother
knowing this much about my driving? Do I
really want some actuary in Hartford to know where drove and when? Is my data really private?
Most of my driving is short,
local trips. But what if I drove into
midtown Manhattan at rush hour? Do I get
penalized for that? Or what if I’m
driving at 3 am, a very risky time when a lot of drunks are on the road? Do I get punished for that?
Our
phones already know a lot of that information and most of us never think
twice about that. But if you’re a good
driver and want to be rewarded for that behavior with lower premiums, one of
these programs might be worth checking.
No comments:
Post a Comment