How the no claims discount works
You typically get a 30% discount after one year of claim-free driving, rising to 65% after four or five years. But companies vary. Some go up to a 70% maximum while others specialising in younger drivers will give higher discounts at an earlier stage.
Many insurers now offer the opportunity to pay a bit more to protect your no claims bonus. The rules vary but you may be able to make two claims in three years, for example, before your bonus is affected. Protecting your bonus will not stop your insurer from hiking up the premium at renewal following a claim. But at least you won’t lose your no claims bonus on top.
Making a claim does not automatically mean you lose your discount. It depends whether the claim is a ‘fault’ or ‘not fault’ claim.
This is not just a question of whether or not you were to blame for the accident, but depends on whether your insurer can recover all its costs from someone else.
For example, if you skid on black ice and hit a wall, your claim would be classed as ‘Fault’, even though you were not to blame, simply because your insurer can’t recoup the cost of fixing your car from anyone else.
Where another driver is involved, unless it can be proved beyond doubt that the other driver was to blame, the two insurers will often settle a claim on a 50:50 or 80:20 basis. This means both drivers will lose some of their no claims bonus. With most insurance companies, you will lose two years of no claims bonus if you have a fault claim.