The modern approach by some (most?) insurance companies/brokers is to get you to chase the other party's insurance company and miss out the middle-man (the one you paid, remember?). Again....short and curlies!!Get quotes from a garage, get them to fix it, your insurance wont ''go up'' , hers will.
And while your vehicle is getting repaired they or your insurance will sort you a hire car , have you called your insurance yet? If not do so, let them do the work for you, this wont effect your NCB or premium.
Get quotes from a garage, get them to fix it, your insurance wont ''go up'' , hers will.
And while your vehicle is getting repaired they or your insurance will sort you a hire car , have you called your insurance yet? If not do so, let them do the work for you, this wont effect your NCB or premium.
Bloody hell, there is still one of them on the road, thought all of that shape had all fallen apart, hate those cars with a passion.Pics of the other vehicle. Thanks zeaphod that's kind of what I was thinking.
The modern approach by some (most?) insurance companies/brokers is to get you to chase the other party's insurance company and miss out the middle-man (the one you paid, remember?). Again....short and curlies!!
First thing I would say is do not hand your pride & joy over to a repairer chosen by the insurance company, some of them wouldn't recognise a proper chassis never mind worked on one. I would take it to a Land Rover specialist and ask for an estimate, but don't send the estimate to your insurer. If they can fix it for £500, go back to the insurer and say you'll settle for £750. If they can fix it for £750, go for £1000. If they won't go for that, go the whole insurance route, involve your own insurer, demand a hire car etc etc.
True, but I'd remind them of the value of a good Defender these days, and what it would cost to write it off!The second option will require caution as well, the more loss to them the more chance of the vehicle being written off so apply common sense , they might threaten write off to scare you into dropping the case.