
Brits brace for unisex car insurance
Insurance companies in the European Union will no longer be able to use gender as a factor when they calculate car and life insurance rates.
This post comes from Des Toups at partner site CarInsurance.com.
They call it the Gender Directive.
Really, they do.
Starting Dec. 21, insurance companies in the European Union won't be able to use gender as a factor when they calculate rates for auto and life insurance.
If you are a British man, you are probably very happy, because you pay a lot more for "cover" than your fairer-sex counterparts. For example, personal finance site Confused.com says the average British man under 20 pays $4,675 a year, but the average woman under 20 pays $2,441.
Britain, Ireland and Italy are expected to see the greatest changes in rates in the wake of a European Court of Justice ruling last year, which extends its 2004 Gender Directive into the realm of financial and insurance contracts.
No one knows exactly how the EU's chromosome-agnostic car insurance rates will shake out, but experts expect a dramatic rise in what female drivers pay -- especially the young ones. Online shopping site Gocompare's head of motor insurance, Scott Kelly, says: "We expect to see premiums equalized at the higher male rate rather than the lower rate for females."
Heres what the difference between the sexes looks like in the U.S. for young drivers, based on a sample of 60,000 car insurance quotes delivered through CarInsurance.com's comparison engine:
| Age | Female | Male | Difference |
| 16 | $3,689 | $4,287 | 16% |
| 17 | $3,399 | $3,682 | 8% |
| 18 | $3,003 | $3,305 | 10% |
| 19 | $2,371 | $2,627 | 11% |
| 20 | $2,260 | $2,502 | 11% |
| 21 | $2,014 | $2,239 | 11% |
| 22 | $1,897 | $2,033 | 7% |
| 23 | $1,791 | $1,857 | 4% |
| 24 | $1,713 | $1,790 | 4% |
| 25 | $1,616 | $1,593 | -1% |
As in Britain, differences in rates largely disappear as young drivers mature. Of course, sex is only one of many things car insurers look at (in the U.S., your ZIP code and your own driving record are among the biggest factors).
Polling by shopping-comparison site uSwitch.com says as many as one in 10 British women might stop driving altogether. Experts also predict a stampede toward usage-based car insurance programs that monitor driving and deliver large discounts to the safest drivers.
Women will also get hit on the life insurance side, where their longer lifespan historically has meant cheaper prices. But they also may get higher pension payments in return.
More on CarInsurance.com and MSN Money:
- Your guide to car insurance discounts
- Buy the car, borrow the bow
- Donate a car -- the right way
- Smart Spending on the go: Get our app for Android or iPhone
- Car insurance for 4.1 cents a mile
- How to get a warning, not a ticket
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