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Track days may void insurance

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Old Oct 23, 2008 | 09:01 AM
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Track days may void insurance

Here's an article saying that many insurance companies are closing a loophole in their auto policies that allowed track days or high-performance driving schools if there was no actual competition.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/19/au...es&oref=slogin

Since the site requires (free) registration, here's the article:

Car Insurance May Not Cover You at the Track

IT’S no secret that insurance companies don’t like the people they cover to drive fast. So it shouldn’t be a surprise that the industry has been removing a policy loophole that insured drivers on racetracks.

That has left weekend warriors uninsured if they participate in track days or attend high-performance driving schools. Jerry Kunzman, executive director of the National Auto Sport Association, said that participation at its track events had jumped fivefold since 2003 and that many of those drivers had no idea they were not covered..

“Maybe 25 or 30 percent have done the research, the middle third just assumes they are covered, and the top third just don’t have a clue,” he said.

What’s happened is that many insurers have redefined the term “racing.” Policies have long had exclusions for racing, but it was defined as a “timed event.”

High-performance driver education neatly avoided that definition. Although cars may take laps at top speed, they aren’t timed.

At many schools, including those held by the Porsche Club of America and the BMW Car Club of America, students are required to attend classroom sessions. On the track, drivers get one-on-one tutoring from an instructor under controlled conditions. The cars are generally sent around the track in small groups with passing limited to straightaways — and only when the driver being passed signals that doing so is all right. So because these runs were not timed, many drivers were covered by their normal automobile policies.

That loophole did not escape the attention of insurers — some clubs practically taunted them in their newsletters. “There was a period of time when clubs were openly flouting this. ‘Take driver’s education and your insurance will cover you. Drive your car the way it was meant to be driven,’” said McKeel Hagerty, chief executive of the Hagerty Insurance Agency, an automotive specialty insurer.

So the industry began to add a new exclusion to its policies in the late 1990s, with most companies adding it within the last few years. Instead of trying to define racing, policies exclude damage at any location that could accommodate racing, timed or not. That eliminated coverage during high-performance driving schools and track days.

Chris Soignier of Austin, Tex., will not be taking his Porsche Cayman to the track, which he had done with his previous cars. When he read his renewal notice from Progressive Insurance last November, he found that the Cayman was not covered on the track.

“I don’t feel like I’m that much at risk, but the magnitude of the loss is too great for me to be comfortable,” he said.

Not all drivers got word of the change, or, like Mr. Soignier, read their new policy. Also, because insurance is regulated by the state, exemptions in Michigan, for example, may differ from those in California.

To make matters worse, asking insurers to clarify coverage could result in a nasty surprise. Mike Barr, a dentist from Palm Beach, Fla., called the insurer USAA to see if his policy covered his Subaru WRX STi on the track.

“Some months later I got a letter from USAA saying they were going to discontinue coverage,” he said.” “They dropped me because I asked about” performance driving schools. “They confirmed it verbally when I called to inquire further.” A USAA spokesman said Dr. Barr was canceled for “several reasons,” but would not elaborate.

Some drivers reduce their exposure by getting an inexpensive track car. As an insurance underwriter for Chubb insurance in Whitehouse Station, N.J., you’d think Eugene Lim would be averse to risk, and he is. But he is also a driving aficionado who is qualified as a high-performance driving instructor. After 40 track days in his Acura NSX, Mr. Lim discovered he was uninsured on the track. So he bought what is essentially a disposable car. “When I got really serious, I bought a turbo Miata. Six thousand dollars would still hurt, but it’s not my NSX,” which was worth about $45,000.

Such a growing market would seem to be an opportunity — and it is. Specialty insurers have tried offering high-performance-school insurance.

“It was a difficult program,” said Laura Bergan, vice president for marketing at American Collectors Insurance. “Difficult as in, we were paying a lot of claims.” American phased out its performance-school coverage last year.

American, like other insurers who have tried the insurance, ran into a series of hurdles. To attract a pool of clients and spread risk, the policies were priced low — an average of $500 to $750 a year, Ms. Bergan said. The number of claims wasn’t a problem, but the cost of the claims was. “Most of the claims were total losses,” she said.

Other companies tried higher pricing, but found few takers.

Cost is not the only barrier. Many drivers don’t think they’ll crash, and unlike regular car insurance, track insurance is not mandated by states. Drivers often confuse track insurance provided by clubs, which in most cases covers only liability and injury, with collision insurance.

The growing market still attracts new insurers. Laura Hauenstein, president of the WSIB Insurance Agency of Jackson, Mich., which specializes in motorsports coverage, was initially against offering performance-school insurance. She changed her mind three years ago when WSIB found a way to streamline the underwriting process.

“I would say we had 100, the first year or two, but this year we put ads in Porsche Panorama,” she said. “My numbers might be off — it could be 500.”

The WSIB premium is 3 percent of the car’s value. The deductible is $2,500, or 4 percent of the car’s value, whichever is greater. So an experienced driver on an approved track with a $100,000 Porsche 911 Carrera S would pay $3,000 to cover 10 events in one year, with a deductible of $4,000. Other companies, like K & K Insurance Group of Fort Wayne, Ind., and Motorsports Insurance Services of Los Angeles, have begun to offer the insurance, but use a more complex formula to price it.

Gene Cottingham, former chief financial officer of Champ Car World Series, which held open-wheel races, knows what track accidents can cost. So he insured his modified 2006 Mustang GT pace car for $40,000. The $1,200 premium seemed high at first, but “when you spread that cost over five to six weekends, it’s really not that much money,” he said.

“The purpose of insurance for me,” he added, “is peace of mind.”
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Old Oct 23, 2008 | 09:04 AM
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This is nothing new really. If you're going to do HPDEs, you have to accept the consequences financially of any damage you may do to your car.
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Old Oct 23, 2008 | 05:32 PM
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^ I totally agree. I was amazed that insurance companies, prior to closing this loophole, were actually paying for track day damage.
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Old Oct 23, 2008 | 05:45 PM
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The 2 insurance companies I have worked for would drop you at the mere mention of track usage, or performance modifications. Incredibly high risk for obvious reasons.
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Old Oct 23, 2008 | 08:13 PM
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Yeah, don't expect any compensation for damage at the track from your regular insurance company... and specific track-day insurance is insanely expensive.

Last time I was at Mid Ohio, some guy wrecked his new Ferrari. I nearly cried a little... not only because of the poor wrecked Ferrari, but because it cut into my track time
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Old Oct 23, 2008 | 08:38 PM
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I called my insurance agent a few years back to inquire about track insurance. We had a good relationship and I'd never made a claim so she went easy on me. She said it was standard practice to drop people if they even asked about track insurance, regardless of whether they went or not. So, basically, if you ask Farmers insurance about track insurance they will most likely drop you on the spot....
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Old Oct 23, 2008 | 09:03 PM
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Hmmmmmm... wonder if there's gonna be more crashes that happen on "deserted desert highways", where magically, there were no witnesses.
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Old Oct 23, 2008 | 10:24 PM
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Have a tow truck to move your car to another street, say you lost control.
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Old Oct 24, 2008 | 03:37 AM
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Originally Posted by jdtsunami
Have a tow truck to move your car to another street, say you lost control.


Stuff like that is why our rates are so high. If you can't afford to repair it out of pocket, don't go on the track.
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Old Oct 24, 2008 | 03:46 AM
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Originally Posted by MrBonus


Stuff like that is why our rates are so high. If you can't afford to repair it out of pocket, don't go on the track.

WORD UP.
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Old Oct 24, 2008 | 07:27 AM
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Originally Posted by UFO
She said it was standard practice to drop people if they even asked about track insurance, regardless of whether they went or not. So, basically, if you ask Farmers insurance about track insurance they will most likely drop you on the spot....
This is what I don't understand. How does asking about the details of your coverage make you a more dangerous/riskier driver for the insurance company? This is so retarded. It sounds like profiling without any data to back it up.

So just because I go (not saying that I do go - just using a figure of speech) and learn how to better control my car at a DE school, where I'm not covered by insurance anyway, this makes me a danger to society with a penalty of being dropped by my insurance carrier?

This is so backwards!!!!!! How come they don't drop insurance for people who don't pay attention, have headsets on so they get cut off from the surrounding environment, read papers, text and yap on the phones, put on makeups, have the portable GPS located right in their field of view (because looking at where you are going on the LCD map is more important than the actual road), have cars with low tire pressure and don't even know it and so on....

If I could, I would rather be surrounded (on regular public roads) by people with DE experience. This would truly be a much safer environment.
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Old Oct 24, 2008 | 07:37 AM
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This will just encourage people to race on the street, where you are cover by insurance.
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Old Oct 24, 2008 | 07:41 AM
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thats really interesting. my insurance company actually insured $5k worth of my mods on top of what the car costs itself. so if i ever crashed the 1g, id get about $8k... very sweet deal.
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Old Oct 24, 2008 | 07:44 AM
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Originally Posted by Saveferris23
This will just encourage people to race on the street, where you are cover by insurance.
I dont think insurance will cover street racing.
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Old Oct 24, 2008 | 07:54 AM
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Originally Posted by rcheung
I dont think insurance will cover street racing.
Obviously
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