Friday, September 7, 2012

The Consent To Rate Letter – Additional Confusion For The Consumer


You may have come across one of my previous blog articles decrying the confusion caused by the North Carolina insurance industry’s consent to rate letter.  If you missed them, click here, or here to read a few.   All of these articles though will lead to one very important point for you to remember:  If you receive a consent to rate letter from your insurance company, do not blindly sign and return it.  This is because doing to just gives them carte blanche to charge you insurance rates that are likely to be far higher than you will need to pay for your home or car insurance policy.   This article will focus on just one more feature of this letter that has caused confusion among consumers and left them facing higher rates than they ever expected to have to pay.

I want to start though with a quick background lesson on why North Carolina has a consent to rate form as a part of its insurance system.  Here in North Carolina, the rates for homeowners insurance and auto insurance as well as many other types of insurance policies, are heavily regulated.   Generally speaking, rates are approved or not by the NC Insurance Department as the maximum rates that can be charged for various types of insurance policies.  The insurance companies then file their rates as deviations, or discounts below the maximum rates.  Very few people will pay the maximum allowable rates for their homeowners insurance or their car insurance.  Occassionally though, an insurance company may feel that they would need to charge a specific client more than the maximum allowable rate because that client is perceived to carry a higher risk of loss for the insurance company.  In order to charge rates above the maximum allowed rate, they must have the client’s permission in writing.  And in cases where that client understands that their risk is higher and also has nowhere else to go to obtain insurance, then this is a good arrangement.    Unfortunately the consent to rate letter, once a rare occurrence is now a work around for many insurance companies to get higher rates out of their customers than the Insurance Department would allow.  This has happened in North Carolina in particular because the rates that are allowed have come to seem inadequate by many insurance companies after all of the money they lost to storms in 2011.  Many now use a consent to rate letter on huge swaths of their books of business just to circumvent the rate making process.    This should make it clear that signing a consent to rate letter without checking around for a better rate is almost always going to mean that you will be left paying far more for your insurance policy than you would otherwise have to pay.

Now that we are seeing such widespread use of the consent to rate form in NC, I felt that it was appropriate to let you in on another aspect of this letter that has misled some insurance consumers.   I am talking about the estimated maximum premium that is shown in the letter.  If you receive a consent to rate letter to sign, you will probably see that there is a mention of the estimated rate that you will be expected to pay if you sign the letter.  While this price might appear to be an accurate estimate, often it is far from the total that you will be paying if you sign the letter.  This is because many insurance companies will simply print the new, higher, base rate on the letter.  But the  base rate does not include the additional costs of endorsements to your policy that help to make your policy unique to your needs.  Perhaps you added towing coverage to your auto insurance policy or you have added guaranteed replacement cost coverage for your dwelling to your homeowners insurance policy.  When the consent to rate letter shows a new price for your policy that doesn’t include these other endorsements and the charges that go along with them then you might find that the bill you receive after you sign the letter is quite a bit higher than the estimate shown on the consent to rate form.  This has led to many cases of double sticker shock, once when you read the letter for the first time and yet another shock when you actually receive your updated, consent to rate renewal policy with rates higher than those estimated on the original letter.

The consent to rate letter is a work around procedure caused by the regulations that North Carolina requires for the insurance rating making process.  It can be confusing and downright misleading.  If you receive a consent to rate letter from your insurance company, I would advise that you call your insurance agent right away and try and understand why you are receiving this letter and what other options you may have for your insurance policy.  If you don’t get an answer that suits you, please call us and we will help you find a better solution.

At Clinard Insurance Group, we have many options available to our policyholders as well as to others who are faced with a consent to rate letter decision.  We still have options for writing homeowners insurance in NC without the auto insurance to support it.  Please feel free to call us, toll free, at 877-687-7557 and we will work to help you explore options that don’t include signing over a consent to rate letter to your insurance company. 

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