Thursday, August 4, 2016

How to get your auto insurance company to fix your car for free

Say you have some damage to your car:  nothing big, maybe a few dents up front with some scratches amounting to a couple thousand dollars in repairs.  Here's how to get an insurance company to pay for them. For free:

Step 1 - Sign up for a Comprehensive and Collision policy with a low deductible - don't worry about the expense - the goal here is to get the best coverage possible. Get immediate coverage and ask them to bill you.
Step 2 - Immediately file a claim for the damage you want repaired.
Step 3 - Within a few days the claim will be paid.
Step 4 - Once the work has been done or you've cashed the check, cancel the policy, just throw the premium notice away.

Is this honest? No. Does it happen? Yes. For three reasons:

Some consumers cheat. Using our visibility into millions of policies we've found that customers who establish new Comprehensive and Collision policies submit claims at a two to four times higher rate in the first month than in the other 11 months of their coverage period. Clearly some customers are 'saving up' their claims for when they get 'better' insurance. And insurance companies encourage this behavior by letting them.

Insurers don't check: Insurers struggle to prevent this because to do so they need to have indications as to which claims are for preexisting damage. But since we estimate that 97 percent of US consumer auto policies are written without a physical inspection insurers end up paying all of the claims. So long as the claim size is modest <$5,000 insurers likely won't scrutinize the claim.

Insurance information systems are fragmented antiques.  It is quite likely that your insurance company - or one you can find  - has no real time integration between its billing and claims paying systems. Typically they'll note the enrollment event but often only update premium payment status periodically.

Regulations enable it. And since most jurisdictions require claims to be paid far sooner than the time in which a premium bill becomes past due, a dishonest customer can game the gap caused by weak insurer technology.

A 'Policy Rocker'?
And even if the customer can't get it fixed for free, he can still get thousands of dollars damage repaired for the price of a single month's payment plan premium. Customers do this every day, rocking back and forth between Minimum State Liability and Comprehensive and Collision for free.

The First Month Excess Claims Problem is an example of how idFusion can be used to discover and measure the magnitude of hidden fraud. idFusion gives insurers tools like Policy Time Migration which arrays all customer policies by Policy Year. Using this, carriers are able to identify and analyze event "hot spots" across the Policy Life Cycle by time and policy element. Hot spots like First Day/Week/Month Excess Claims . Once problems are identified, idFusion delivers the alerts, workflow and tools that enable insurers to address and ultimately prevent these events from occurring.

The good news is that the First Month Excess Claims Problem has a solution that idFusion can implement for insurers. The bad news is that if they don't implement it then it's the honest policy holders that foot the bill. We think that's wrong - which why we founded VeracityID.