Skip advert
Advertisement

'High Insurance premiums are forcing owners to scrap their cars'

Mike Rutherford is stunned that car insurance premiums have risen by an average 61 per cent in the past 12 months

Opinion - scrap

The insurance industry urgently needs to take out a new policy – against itself. The reason? Just as the Volkswagen Group and a few other offending car manufacturers lost customers (some of them forever) who were cheated when purchasing diesel vehicles, a growing number of heinously greedy insurers are now losing motorists unable or unwilling to pay the absurdly high prices they’re being charged for their motor policies in 2023.

Advertisement - Article continues below

No doubt about it: countless drivers are now saying of the great insurance rip-off, enough is enough. But it’s not what they say, it’s what they do that matters.

Some are being forced to scrap cars on the grounds that the cost to insure them per year is not far off the value of the actual vehicles. And that’s madness.

Other motorists are slapping Statutory Off Road Notification (SORN) restrictions on their much-loved cars, locking them away uninsured in secure, private, alarmed garages and perhaps hoping to wheel them out again when the UK’s £20billion-per-year insurance business is forced by politicians or market forces (or both) to charge more reasonable prices.

Those who I consider to be the smartest real-world motorists are downgrading to more modestly priced and powered cars that sit in lower insurance groups.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

Sadly, others are having to admit their motoring days are over because they can no longer pay the prices charged by insurers. How is that ‘progress’?

Another worrying by-product of the situation is the small but scary band of can’t-pay/won’t-pay drivers taking the illegal route of driving on public roads uninsured.

The above examples and other factors prove we’re in a rotten, car insurance industry-inspired mess. It’s motivated by sheer greed and designed to squeeze consumers until the pips squeak. Textbook stuff: an insurance sector pricing motorists out of the market and therefore reducing the size of its customer base. Firms are allowing once-loyal, lucrative clients to walk away and possibly never return. How dumb is that?

And how ironic that the unfit-for-purpose insurance industry now needs to seriously consider insuring itself – against the inevitable loss of countless customers, a reduction in the number of policies sold and, in turn, possible lost profits of millions of pounds.

Think I’m exaggerating? In a period of just 12 inflation-shattering months, quoted motor insurance premiums have risen by an average 61 per cent, with drivers in London paying 69.5 per cent more, those in the West Midlands suffering a 64.4 per cent hike, and South Easterners enduring a 64.2 per cent leap. At the same time wage rises – for the lucky ones that got them – were nearer six per cent! You do the maths.

Meanwhile, one of Britain’s best-known and most-respected national broadsheets reports that some Range Rovers have become “virtually impossible” to insure in certain parts of London. The paper reckons a typical 35-year-old female resident with six years’ driving experience is now being asked to pay £22,515 for annual cover. Worst value for money in modern motoring history? Probably.

Is car insurance too expensive? Let us know your thoughts in the comments section....

Skip advert
Advertisement
Chief columnist

Mike was one of the founding fathers of Auto Express in 1988. He's been motoring editor on four tabloid newspapers - London Evening News, The Sun, News of the World & Daily Mirror. He was also a weekly columnist on the Daily Telegraph, The Independent and The Sunday Times. 

Skip advert
Advertisement

Recommended

Why EVs are so expensive to insure, and how to make them cheaper
Ford Puma Gen-E - front action

Why EVs are so expensive to insure, and how to make them cheaper

Research shows that EVs are usually 15 to 25 per cent more expensive to insure than petrol cars – the experts at Thatcham say they have the solution
News
3 Mar 2026
What are Cat N and Cat S cars? Car insurance write-off categories explained
Crashed car

What are Cat N and Cat S cars? Car insurance write-off categories explained

If a car is written off by the insurance provider, it could be assigned Category A, B, S or N status, but what does this mean and how do write-off cla…
Tips & advice
26 Feb 2026
Insurers still refuse to cover some Chinese cars despite booming sales
Skywell BE11 - front action

Insurers still refuse to cover some Chinese cars despite booming sales

Insurance companies seem to be struggling to keep pace with the wave of new cars coming from China, and buyers are literally paying the price
News
26 Feb 2026
Best GAP insurance 2026
Best GAP insurance 2026 - how we tested

Best GAP insurance 2026

Which website offers the best user experience and cover?
Product group tests
22 Jan 2026

Most Popular

New Toyota Yaris: next-gen supermini to embrace hybrid and EV power
Toyota Yaris - front (watermarked)

New Toyota Yaris: next-gen supermini to embrace hybrid and EV power

The new Toyota Yaris will arrive by 2028, and our exclusive images preview how it could look
News
5 May 2026
New Freelander 8: huge SUV is coming to the UK, just don’t call it a Land Rover
Freelander 8 - front

New Freelander 8: huge SUV is coming to the UK, just don’t call it a Land Rover

We get the scoop about a UK sales confirmation of the new joint-venture between Chery and Jaguar Land Rover
News
28 Apr 2026
New Skoda Epiq interior sketches lay a path to the big reveal
Skoda Epic interior

New Skoda Epiq interior sketches lay a path to the big reveal

Skoda releases images of the Epiq interior as the build up begins to the full reveal on May 19th 2026.
News
4 May 2026

Find a car with the experts