Van insurance premiums driven up 6.3% in 2022

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According to research from pricing data experts Consumer Intelligence, premiums for vans have risen by 6.3% in the three months to March, which the organisation says is due to the FCA’s general insurance pricing rules, which were introduced to put an end to “price walking”.

Since January, insurers have no longer been able to offer new customers enticingly low premiums to win their business – with renewing customers only allowed access to the same deals as a new customer. Data from Consumer Intelligence suggests it’s having the effect of reducing the number of cheap deals in the market.

An average annual van policy in the UK now stands at £1,135.

Average premiums have now increased 40.2% since April 2014 when Consumer Intelligence first started collecting data.

Within our age demographics, the bulk of these rises have come from van drivers aged 25-49 and the over-50s, who’ve seen 60.1% and 55.6% price hikes, respectively – whereas the under-25s have witnessed price falls in the region of 23.8% over the same period.  

Drivers using their vans for business (£1,145) continue to pay slightly higher premiums than those who use their vans as a car substitute (£1,107) under a ‘social, domestic and pleasure’ (SDP) policy.
 
Business users have also seen their motor premiums increase 6.8% in the last three months, with premiums rising just 5.0% for those using their vans as a car substitute.

All age groups have recorded broadly similar premium rises in the last three months – with van drivers aged 25-49 (6.4%) seeing prices increase slightly more than for those aged 17-24 (5.9%) and the over-50s (5.7%).

A typical annual policy for a younger van driver under the age of 25 remains prohibitively high at £3,936. For those aged 25-49 an annual premium is now, on average, £835. While for the over-50s, an annual policy costs just £562.