Do you cancel your insurance when you sell your bike?

yvo6

RMS Regular
Messages
161
Thought this was interesting: its regarding cancelling insurance on the bike you have just sold.

A BIKER could be forced to pay tens of thousands of pounds after a man had a fatal crash on the motorcycle he had sold him just days before.

A loophole in insurance law could mean 48-year-old Paul Duffy is liable for all costs involved with the accident that killed banned driver James Bryson.

Bryson was riding uninsured when he crashed into a Toyota Yaris near Arbroath, Scotland, just seven days after buying the bike. But because Duffy forgot to cancel his insurance policy, MCE insurance brokers say they are liable for the accident and can claim the costs back from him in court.

Duffy, who is recovering from leukaemia and looks after his disabled wife, said: ‘Lawyers said that because Mr Bryson had died and had no insurance, they would be paying out on my policy.

'Because he chose to buy my motorcycle, I am, in the eyes of the law, giving him permission to ride the bike and I am in breach of my contract. So if I have any assets, MCE can take them from me to recover costs.

'I am effectively having to pay for an uninsured driver having a fatal accident.

'I have never broken the law. I don’t even have as much as a speeding ticket.

'But I have been told this is the law, and I have no protection or rights.

'I honestly thought that once the bike was sold, it was no longer my responsibility.

Bryson, 28, was serving a four-year driving ban and had only just been released from prison after attempting to evade three police vehicles in a friend’s car while nearly three times over the drink-drive limit.

The father-of-one was unable to be saved by paramedics after crashing the £3,500 Kawasaki ZX10R next to a stone wall on Seaton Road.

Paul, from Fife, is now warning all drivers to immediately cancel their insurance policies on any vehicles that they sell.
 

cupraricky

RMS Regular
Messages
1,567
Location
N.Ireland
That stories been about for a good while. Think I read it on NIB when it was running.

Best bet is to move it not cancel it. Insurance companies love when u cancel cause they keep like 99.99% of what u pay (robbing f#@#+?s). Best transferring it, easiest on the wallet and straightforward.
 

m00k

RMS Regular
Messages
14,270
Location
Disney Land
Drives
Vauxhalls/Holden
Should always cancel, move or notify company you no longer keep it, they will generally allow you a grace period if you don't have anything to transfer onto immediately
 

Ghost

RMS Regular
Messages
9,772
I'm sorry but that's a ridiculous question. Would you keep paying for your phone insurance if you cancel your contract? Or would you keep paying a mortgage on a house you no longer live in?
 

yvo6

RMS Regular
OP
yvo6
Messages
161
I think the point of the story was to cancel/move it immediately - not in a few days :grinning:
 

NotKG

Banned
Messages
1,925
Location
gone from here
i'v left mine on a bike i sold for the winter months (about 4), but it was a mate i sold it to and he rides summers like me.
sort of all right as i know he wasnt out or planning to , to i got a new bike.
-
used to be easy to adjust your insurance online, now it seem's to be you have to ring them to adjust or change. ebike , bennetts, etc used to be change bike details in 5 mins.
last bike i bought, they offered me a call back and it took 3 days.
USELESS!
 

ilovequo

RMS Regular
Messages
1,777
Location
Fermanagh
Notify them that it sold, generally give you a grace period of a few weeks to transfer onto a new bike... i generally transfer onto an old 200cc trail bike in the shed to keep ncb running...
 

m00k

RMS Regular
Messages
14,270
Location
Disney Land
Drives
Vauxhalls/Holden
i'v left mine on a bike i sold for the winter months (about 4), but it was a mate i sold it to and he rides summers like me.
sort of all right as i know he wasnt out or planning to , to i got a new bike.
-
used to be easy to adjust your insurance online, now it seem's to be you have to ring them to adjust or change. ebike , bennetts, etc used to be change bike details in 5 mins.
last bike i bought, they offered me a call back and it took 3 days.
USELESS!

As far as I'm aware you aren't allowed to have two policies on one vehicle so if he has insured it and it's stolen etc could complicate things, just one to watch
 

ApexDave

New Member
Messages
2
Drives
S1000RR
Big eye opener reading this. Ive always sold my bikes to dealers so usually by the time they sell it its lapsed but will remember reading this for sure.
 
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