Consumer Action Group envelope labels
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Sheet of 20 self-adhesive envelope labels £3.50 inc p&p
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Do your Internet search here Reclaim the Right Ltd. - reg.05783665 in the UK
reg. office:- 923 Finchley Road
London
NW11 7PE
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Would you like to clean up your credit file? Check it out | | | | | | | Norwich Union Questions and Issues This forum is monitored by a Norwich Union Customer Relations Manager, and is the best place to get direct answers to your Norwich Union questions. | Welcome to The Consumer Action Group and The Bank Action Group
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Why don't you come and introduce yourself in the Welcome section at the top of the forum. Then have a look around the rest of it.
Do not post or start claiming until you have read the entire FAQ section and step by step guides and you have a good basic idea of what to do and of the layout of the forum.
Good luck claiming your bank charges. We strongly suggest that you register under a UserID and not your own name |  |
9th March 2008, 13:17
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#3 (permalink)
| | Basic Account Customer | Re: Asked to pay excess in ADVANCE of claim - how come??? thank you, Saintly! I have searched the Norwich Union website for information and all I can find is the following from the FAQ's: 9. Do I receive a cheque after a claim?
Some people prefer to receive a cheque for their loss but this is becoming increasingly infrequent. Most contents insurance companies will replace items for you as they can bulk-buy. This reduces the cost of claims and ultimately helps keep premiums lower. Home Insurance, Building Insurance, Contents Insurance | FAQ's from Norwich Union
I also went to the iVal website iVal - Under Construction and there is no information there because it is under construction, but there was a link to this page Visa Options
This means claims are not paid by cheque but by a plastic card. So what would happen if my son paid over the 100 pounds that he is being asked for, is that IF the claim were accepted and IF the amount agreed to be paid were over 100 pounds, the money that my son paid in cash would be returned to him in the form of a plastic card which he could only use at iVal's approved merchants.
At best it seems that this is not good financial practice and at worst, the policy holder may lose the money he hands over.
What interests me is whether this is standard practice amongst other insurers besides Norwich Union. |
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11th September 2008, 23:36
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#8 (permalink)
| | Platinum Account Customer | Re: Asked to pay excess in ADVANCE of claim - how come??? Quote:
Originally Posted by daviet1976 Just want to add that 99.9% of insurance claim are dealt with in this way. | Do you have data to support this? I feel it may be an overstatement. I have never paid the excess before my claim could be dealt with. Quote:
Originally Posted by daviet1976 If you get a replacement TV for instance, at what point would you expect to pay your excess? | When I collected the TV or when it was delivered. Quote:
Originally Posted by daviet1976 Very few claims are settled by cash these days, given money laundering and fraud concerns (although cash settlements are a very effective method of saving money!)
Think about what happens with car insurance. When do you pay your excess to the repairer? Before or after the repairs? | After. Quote:
Originally Posted by daviet1976 Legally everyone has an element of self-insurance written into their policies. This is the excess. | Apart from excluded perils required as a matter of public policy, there is no legal requirement for any self-insurance. The biggest component of self-insurance is not the excess but the excluded perils and any loss that exceeds the limit of indemnity of the policy. Quote:
Originally Posted by daviet1976 By paying the excess you, in effect, seal the contract of the claim being accepted and allow the insurer to proceed further.
This is why we were always told to be very careful in requesting an excess if we thought the claim was in anyway fraudulent, as we could not give an insured the impression that the claim was "accepted". | And further, it puts insurers on the back foot if they later wish to deny or restrict the claim in any way. |
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13th September 2008, 00:05
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#10 (permalink)
| | Platinum Account Customer | Re: Asked to pay excess in ADVANCE of claim - how come??? [quote=daviet1976;1709481]Apologies.
99.9% of the claims I personally settled were handled this way- both household and motor. Simply for efficiency. Quote:
Originally Posted by Bernie_the_Bolt Apart from excluded perils required as a matter of public policy, there is no legal requirement for any self-insurance. The biggest component of self-insurance is not the excess but the excluded perils and any loss that exceeds the limit of indemnity of the quote]
I agree Bernie. But for the "Man on the Clapham Bus" my point still stands!
NUI policy is to collect the xs as early as possible in the claim. Suppliers will ask for the excess before the elivery of good. Repairers will ask for the xs before the car is collected from the Insured. | But notably not before the claim is admitted and a settlement figure agreed upon. That is what the OP has been asked to do. |
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