It has now been 1 full year since the Government of Ontario changed your automobile insurance. I do hope that all of your insurance providers have discussed the changes with you and provided you with the new options when your insurance policy renewed. If you have not had a discussion with your insurance provider about the changed optional Accident Benefits coverage on your policy - I suggest you call them right away. You may be missing some much needed coverage based on your own unique needs.
Below is an article from Canadian Underwriter.ca with respect to the coverage being purchased by other consumers in the province of Ontario. Where do you fall? Which coverage if any was right for you?
Ontario auto insurance policyholders were about four times more likely to purchase the increased death and funeral benefit than any of the other optional benefits offered under the province's reformed auto insurance scheme.
Ontario's insurance regulator, the Financial Services Commission of Ontario (FSCO), asked the largest private passenger auto insurance insurers in Ontario to complete a survey in January 2011 regarding take-up of optional benefits.
The 24 insurance companies surveyed represented 78% of the Ontario market, based on written premium.
The survey found Ontario policyholders were most likely to purchase the following five optional benefits:
• increased death and funeral (4.76%);
• increased medical and rehabilitation to $100,000 (1.31%);
• increased attendant care to $72,000 (1.22%);
• increased medical and rehabilitation to $1.1 million and increased attendant care to $1.07 million (1.04%); and
• caregiver, housekeeping and home maintenance (0.64%).
Other optional benefits purchased included indexation (0.29%), increased income replacement to $600 (0.26%), dependant care benefit (0.25%), additional coverage to offset tort deductibles (0.19%), increased income replacement to $1,000 (0.17%) and increased income replacement to $800 (0.13%).
Optional benefits were a key component of the province's auto reforms, which were implemented on Sept. 1, 2010. The reforms essentially reduced consumers' mandatory medical-rehabilitation coverage from $100,000 to $50,000 (with an option to buy back up to $100,000) and converted some mandatory benefits into optional benefits.
FSCO approached the companies in order to understand consumers' purchasing habits regarding optional coverages. The survey covered policies written between Sept. 1, 2010 and Dec. 31, 2010.
The results of the survey were published in the Aug. 30, 2011 edition of FSCO's Auto Insurance e-Newsletter, posted online.
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