When an auto insurance company looks into your credit what are they looking for?
When an auto insurance company looks into your credit what are they looking for?
No related posts.
Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.
When an auto insurance company looks into your credit what are they looking for?
No related posts.
Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.
Auto Insurance Auto Insurance Company Best Golf Boston Celtics Buy Insurance Car Auto Car Insurance Company Insurance Dad Game Golf Ball Golf Balls Golf Cart Golf Club Golf Clubs Golf Course Golf Courses Golf Game Golf Swing Golf Tournament Good Golf Handicap Health Insurance Holes Insurance Insurance Auto Insurance Car Insurance Company Insurance Life Insurance Work Irons Life Insurance Life Insurance Company Life Insurance Policies Life Insurance Policy Lot Money Parents People Play Golf Playing Golf Taylor Lautner Term Insurance Tiger Vw Golf
WP Cumulus Flash tag cloud by PopVan.cn and Rve requires Flash Player 9 or better.
5 Responses
1.31.2010
Farmers does not see your report, we only get a letter rating. A-Z I and N being incomplete. We do not see anything on your credit report, we can only see why you got the rating you got, too many accounts open, late payments, or not enough credit history but we do not get any elaboration on any of the explanations.
1.31.2010
no, they cannot see your actual report. it is looking to see your credit range. the higher the credit the better "tier" you get put into , which translates into lower rates. Source(s): agent
1.31.2010
All three of these are plausible explanations, but there IS another side to the story. When you pay an insurance premium, the insurance is basically "fronting" you the insurance protection, which is granted on the condition that future premiums will be paid on a timely basis. I am also an insurance agent, although I do freely admit to not being an auto or P and C agent. Your credit score is used by the insurance company to determine whether you are likely to pay premiums ontime, and if it doesn't show that, I'd wager money that this information is used to stack you in a higher rate bracket which will force you to pay more money earlier in the policy life, thus easing them of the responsibility for having to "sweat out" your payments. Before all the "down thumbers" come out, please reflect upon all the premium finance companies in existence in the USAmy: hate to be disagreeable, but if you find out how many accounts I have open, how slowly or punctually I pay my accounts, account balances, etc., you have effectively gotten my credit information, even if you don't have "the report". Your explanation sounds suspiciously like another I heard a few years ago…."I did not have sex with that woman………." etc etc. If it smells like horse manure, looks like horse manure and feels like horse manure, believe me, it's horse manure. Farmers is no better or worse than anyone else.
1.31.2010
statisitcally the poorer your credit the higher risk one is to filing a claim. The more a company pays out in claims then the more money they have to charge their customers. So therefore the better your credit the less likely you are to file a claim therefor the cheaper your price. Source(s): I am an insurance agent
1.31.2010
Mainly your credit scores. Credit history has been found to be statistically related to claims rates – people with poor credit management habits also have higher accident rates.