Sorry Sushii your own insurance company covers your vehicle. You cannot claim your vehicle damages under someone else's policy. Not how it works in ontario.
It can work that way, but only in a not-at-fault collision.
Sorry Sushii your own insurance company covers your vehicle. You cannot claim your vehicle damages under someone else's policy. Not how it works in ontario.
Sorry Sushii your own insurance company covers your vehicle. You cannot claim your vehicle damages under someone else's policy. Not how it works in ontario.
Not really. In really serious crashes involving seriously-heavy long term payouts there might be efforts to recover costs behind the scenes, but not for run-of-the-mill crashes. That's why you pay for DCPD coverage as part of your mandatory coverage set.What i meant was that when your in a not-at-fault accident you do not have to pay anything because your insurance company will cover everything BUT they are going to go after the other company for the losses. So essentially the other company is paying for both parties.
Not really. In really serious crashes involving seriously-heavy long term payouts there might be efforts to recover costs behind the scenes, but not for run-of-the-mill crashes. That's why you pay for DCPD coverage as part of your mandatory coverage set.
Not really. In really serious crashes involving seriously-heavy long term payouts there might be efforts to recover costs behind the scenes, but not for run-of-the-mill crashes. That's why you pay for DCPD coverage as part of your mandatory coverage set.
im not sure if you are joking or stupid
Your insurance company going after the other insurance company behind the scenes is called subrogation. That's not permitted for vehicle damage payouts arising from a not-at-fault crash and where your insurance company pays out under your DCPD coverage.
If you're not at fault in a crash, YOUR insurance company pays to repair or replace your vehicle out of your DCPD coverage. Your insurance company takes the entire hit on that and it cannot go after the insurance company of the at-fault vehicle to recover the costs of that DCPD payout.
please, PLEASE educate yourself on the process of subrogation before spewing out any more nonsense
Sorry on my berry so my apologies for typos.I was on bayview just south of loblaws, lady infront wasn't paying attention and locked her breaks. I slammed my breaks and went into a skif. Virtually no damage to her car. My bike is totalled. I asked for. A witness to call the cops. Next thing I know I'm charged with careless driving.Honest to god I was under the speed limit with enough distance. Bike is gone... Insurance is only liability so I'm 4g out of pocket with a charge.Can it get any worse?
Not really. In really serious crashes involving seriously-heavy long term payouts there might be efforts to recover costs behind the scenes, but not for run-of-the-mill crashes. That's why you pay for DCPD coverage as part of your mandatory coverage set.
Hmmm, maybe that's why insurance prices are so high. If instead of "insurance" paying your own insurance company to cover 0 percent fault incidents, maybe they should force the at-fault driver's insurer to pay.
Then maybe the insurance companies would start putting more effort into charging those who frequently offend more $$$ for their policies, and charge much less to those of us with squeaky clean records...
if you took the time to google this, you would realize its actually a cost saving measure.
Just because it's cheaper for the INSURANCE companies to do it this way, does not mean it's cheaper for the policy holder (especially one with a squeaky clean record).
I could care a less if they charge a "high risk offender" $10,000 /year to offset the costs of additional paperwork involved.
Just because it's cheaper for the INSURANCE companies to do it this way, does not mean it's cheaper for the policy holder (especially one with a squeaky clean record).
I could care a less if they charge a "high risk offender" $10,000 /year to offset the costs of additional paperwork involved.