| Lonely Planet™ · Thorn Tree Forum · 2020 | ![]() |
rental car insuranceCountry forums / UK & Ireland | ||
I have been reading a number of comments from people about renting a car in the UK. some people mentioned using a separate company for insurance. evidently this only works for residents of europe. another thing i found out is that if i use my credit card, it offers full insurance coverage for any damage to the car. this is very common with most credit cards. What i am trying to find out is if liability insurance is standard on car rentals when yo don't buy the supplemental insurance. . the fine print is very byzantine and hard to understand. Does anyone know if this is standard with car rentals in the UK and if so , do esthete mean that if i use my credit card i don't have to buy extra insurance? | ||
We have rented a lot of cars overseas - through www.rentalcars.com - and just (a) have a credit card that pays travel insurance, including excess etc, and (b) only take the minimum list of included insurance in the rental contract, and this covers Collision Damage Waiver, etc. We never buy anything extra at all - it is a major profit centre for the car rental companies, so we avoid it. | 1 | |
"my credit card, it offers full insurance coverage for any damage to the car. this is very common with most credit cards." | 2 | |
I'm not sure that is correct at all ... your choice of insurer is not subject to the approval of the car provider ... they have their own insurance tie-ins, so they are terribly conflicted. Don't listen to them! | 3 | |
We have an annual car hire insurance (with Questor) and when asked if we want to pay the excess waiver fee, we just say no, offering no explanations. Car hire companies don't need to know why you decline their cover, just that you don't want it. We've had no problem at all with that. | 4 | |
It is a legal requirement for car rental companies to provide legal liability insurance in their base price. This is because it is illegal to drive without it. The price may be reduced by increasing the excess you need to pay. | 5 | |
A car rental company is NOT going to give you one of their cars unless they are satisfied that your "optional" insurance is going to cover damage to their vehicle. Better to find out before you get to the collections desk? The rental company legally has to provide what is generally termed Road risk insurance to cover liability to life and certain other aspects. | 6 | |
Perhaps we're using different terminology here. What we refuse to buy is the extra excess cover, nothing more, nothing less. The car is still insured as you said, by them, but that is within the price and non-negotiable. But we have used our cover in the UK, Seychelles and Australia with no problem at all. | 7 | |
The basic price you are quoted for a rental has to include enough coverage for you to legally drive the car, so you will have liability coverage without paying for any extras, what you will not have is coverage for damage to the rental car. The rental company does not have to accept your insurance coverage for damage and may require you to put down a deposit with your credit card before they will rent you the car if you are not taking their coverage. | 8 | |
Thanks for making that clear marka. I obviously didn't explain myself properly but my main point, that you don't have to buy their excess waiver, remains and the annual cover we have, which is cheaper than car hire companies, even when only hiring a car once a year. It gives us peace of mind! | 9 | |
We solve all this (eliminating surprises and confrontation) by pre-booking and pre-paying with www.rentalcars.com. We have never been required to pay for anything else at the pick-up point ... other than a one-way drop-off fee in a few cases (and about which we have been well forewarned). | 10 | |
If you have a credit card then paying a deposit because you have your own insurance may never show up on your statement as the rental company just usually gets an approval for the amount of the deposit (which does reduce your available credit) but does not put through a charge using the approval unless you return the car damaged. So if you return the car undamaged all the happens is that the approval expires in a fortnight or so unused so you never see anything on your statement which only shows actual charges. However if you have a debit card then it will be an actual charge for the deposit, followed by a refund if you return the car undamaged, which is never cheap if it involves foreign exchange, if the rental company will even accept debit cards, which a lot do not. | 11 | |
The only way you can use a Debit card to rent a car is to pre pay and include all the Insurance bringing the deductible to zero. Very few operators actually offer the option and tend to be top priced. | 12 | |
This company offers long term car rental in the UK and they also need you to get insurance. | 13 | |
This topic has been automatically locked due to inactivity. Email community@lonelyplanet.com if you would like to add to this topic and we'll unlock it for you. | 14 | |