rosewood
Well-Known Member
My hillyard is insured through Edward William Marine without a survey
I insure with GJW and can thoroughly recommend them, having had a claim sorted very fairly.I've been with JGW who usually accept an owners condition report. I would thoroughly recommend them as I've made a couple of claims and they've paid up. You never find out if your insurer is any good till you make a claim!
Blimey! £700 for an insurance survey on a 30 footer? I must be working in the wrong part of the country.
Seriously - should be about £270-300.
A survey could also give some piece of mind, after all its not only value of the boat at stake here, but loved ones too...
I think the OP amongst others is confused about why the insurers ask for a survey on first accepting a risk.
It's to confirm the value of the boat they're insuring first and foremost.
This also applies at later renewals, not just on initial policy. We've been with Towergate for 10 years but this is the first survey they've demanded, at 25 years old.
I expected our surveyor to haggle over insured value which is higher than some boats of the same model are now selling for. He pointed out that the insured value wasn't just what other boats are selling for, it's what it would cost to replace my boat with one of the same age, in the same condition and level of equipment. I gave him an inventory split into two - what had been replaced under routine maintenance/breakage and, what had been added since purchase to increase the value. Current insured value was accepted by him (hopefully to be confirmed by insurers), despite the drop in market prices.
I'd look at changing insurers at your next renewal. I was with Towergate until recently. Had to make a claim back in the summer. It took them about 6 months to settle the claim, and what they paid was significantly less than what it cost to sort out. Having originally agreed values, when it came to a claim, they suddenly changed their minds and told me the values were less than what was originally agreed.