Payment Protection Insurance
What you need to know about Personal Payment Insurance
Each and every time you apply for a financial loan whether it
is a credit card, mortgage or
a personal
loan the provider will
no doubt offer you a policy to protect your payments called a
Personal
Payment Insurance.
For those of you who have taken out a PPI will have noticed
that the cost of this insurance is quite high. In fact,
research in to these insurance policy types has unveiled that
a high percentage of the total income on PPI is apportioned back
into commissions.
Are you really protected?
The whole idea of taking out Payment protection policy (PPI)
is to protect yourself when a situation can become worse. For
example you could be unfortunately be made redundant, your health takes an unexpected turn for the worse or you could even have
an accident that stops you from working.
If any of the above should occur then you would expect that
you could call your policy provider and explain the situation
and let them take care of everything else. The reality
is that many people have realised only too late that their policy
does not fully cover them for their situation due to a technical
clause they did not read initially at the time of signing.
According to industry research the number of people who have
taken out a PPI and actually make a claim is less than 5 per
cent (As at QTR1 2007) and even more disturbing was that around
25 per cent of these are then rejected.
Realise the true cost!
It has been mentioned before but it is seriously important to
realise the true cost of PPI depending on where you go for a
PPI, whether it is from an independent or the actual provider
of the loan. There have been known cases where the cost
of PPI has nearly doubled the initial loan amount.
Some
providers will charge a monthly fee to protect your loan and
other will add the total cost onto the actual loan amount which
results in the PPI costing far too much.
Your circumstance and the affordability
Depending on how much you borrow you may be forced to consider
PPI, make an assessment based on what the policy actually covers
you for. Ensure you read the small print in detail.
Choosing a provider
Usually the loan provider will be the first to offer some form
of PPI insurance. Unless you know the market well, do
not accept or commit to anything. Contact independent companies
and ensure you get like for like quotations in order for you
to make accurate comparisons.
A little tip
Try and manage the amount of borrowings you have and hopefully
you will not need to consider a PPI.
Other Loan Information:
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