Pay As You Drive plans are one of the most popular innovations in auto insurance of 2009. As their name suggests, Pay As You Drive plans charge drivers on the basis of how many miles they drive. Drive less, save more. In tough economic times, the idea of reducing this one monthly bill almost all of us have to pay is very appealing. However, Pay As You Go has a downside.
First off, if you use Pay As You Go, you have to allow your use of your car to be monitored. Monitoring your mileage is not free, and you pay those costs, not the insurance company. Especially if you have a GPS device installed, the costs of monitoring can be greater than the savings in your premiums. Moreover, if you change companies, you will have to change monitoring devices, too. That means you should think twice before you change companies just to get what appears to be a lower rate.
Second, the companies that make the odometer tracking devices often charge a monthly fee for transmitting the data. So, not only do drivers have to pay for the odometer tracking device to participate in a Pay As You Drive insurance program, but they will also have to pay additional fees. Again, this could possibly strip away any savings benefits gained from Pay As You Drive insurance.
Additionally, insurance companies would have to develop an entirely new payment structure in order to offer Pay As You Drive insurance to their customers. The insurance companies could then easily pass any costs associated with this new payment structure directly onto drivers, again removing any financial benefit gained from Pay As You Drive insurance.
There are legitimate concerns about how your odometer data may be used. The devices that provide mileage numbers can be modified to tell you the company not just how many miles you drive, but where you drive, when you drive, and how often you go there. This information might be used to justify increasing your premiums, or it might be passed on to third parties for entirely different purposes, none of which is likely to be to your advantage.
Supporters of Pay As You Drive plans assert that driving less will result in fewer accidents. However, the correlation between miles driven and number of accidents is not necessarily simple. Low-mileage drivers are not necessarily safer drivers. It is just as easy for a Pay As You Drive driver to get into a crash as a driver covered by a more traditional insurance program.
At first glance, the promises of lower premiums for Pay As You Drive seem very attractive. If you are considering a Pay As You Drive policy, however, be sure to ask detailed questions of your authorized insurance agent to make sure Pay As You Drive is really right for you.
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