Curious which insurance company?
How long with them?
Got my renewal letter today. Policy went down.
Last year was $1210.00/yr
This renewal period $1095.05 /yr
$15 dollar saving. No enough for a tank of gas.
$115 dollar saving. Enough for a few tanks of gas
Policy is with TD.
Were they okay with the 1100 rsv4 or the 1000? Just curious because they wouldn't do my 1100.Wawanesa doesn't want my KTM. The engine is too big. They were fine with the RSV4 that makes another 20hp and goes an indicated 330kph.
Make it make sense.
Update I was able to secure insurance with Economical through NFP for significantly cheaper than what I was originally paying.My premium went up. Time to shop around, although last year I had trouble finding companies willing to insure the rsv4.
The 999cc version (2016). Yeah, the 1100 engine is too "big," never mind that the 999cc version makes 201hp according to the factory.Were they okay with the 1100 rsv4 or the 1000? Just curious because they wouldn't do my 1100.
Something similar happened to me when I was looking at getting a different bike.Wawanesa doesn't want my KTM. The engine is too big. They were fine with the RSV4 that makes another 25hp and goes an indicated 330kph.
Make it make sense.
If I would have known the 1100 would make that much of a difference to insurance companies I would have opted for another bike but it is ridiculous how they rate bikes.The 999cc version (2016). Yeah, the 1100 engine is too "big," never mind that the 999cc version makes 201hp according to the factory.
The cost of the bike is pennies to insurance companies. The real risk are the big payouts, like accident benefits. Also liability, but really can 500 pounds cause that much destruction to third-party's property?Something similar happened to me when I was looking at getting a different bike.
I was paying about $2.1k/year for a 135 hp Monster with TD. I requested quotes for a SuperSport 950 (110 hp) from different agents and companies, and the average came out to around $3.4k/year.
I also quoted a few older 1200 Multistradas (2012–2014) and the premiums were in the $4k/year range. For bikes that sell between 6k to 9k. What???
Meanwhile, the best quote I got for a brand-new Multi V4 was $1.9k/year, for a bike that is three times the cost and 40 more hp than the Monster.
BANANAS!
(These numbers might look a bit high, but I’ve had my full M for less than five years and live near downtown.)
BUT the metrics that influence pricing is kinda out to lunch.
Those metrics seem to differ wildly between companies.Look up actuarial science, and you'll realize there's both a rhyme and a reason for the rates they come up with. Just because it makes no sense to most people doesn't mean it doesn't make sense.
There is no real actuarial data in Canada for motorcycles rates are just set on CC's and random things that someone's decided not risk like cars.Look up actuarial science, and you'll realize there's both a rhyme and a reason for the rates they come up with. Just because it makes no sense to most people doesn't mean it doesn't make sense.
Those metrics seem to differ wildly between companies.
On my 796 I was getting quotes from 1300.00 to 5000.00 for all the same coverage.
The Tuono is one of the hardest bikes to insure now. Most will not touch it.That should be part of the actuarial calculations factoring in each company's risk tolerance, at least from what I've been told and noticed myself. Claims history seems to be a major factor, making squid-popular bikes more expensive and rarer bikes less. That's why I don't like riding what other people do, and why my SXV 550 is cheaper to insure than a CBR125R. Also why the Tuono V4 was impossibly affordable to insure at one point (and may still be, but that could change after enough people start crashing them).