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Sep 10 at 18:32 history edited Michael Hall
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S Sep 10 at 18:24 history suggested nobody CC BY-SA 4.0
Remove noise, add breaks
Sep 10 at 14:29 comment added Crazymoomin If they made the mistake (you did this over the phone instead of online for example), insist that any change fees are waived. However if you've bought the insurance in the last 14 days, legally there should be no change fees (but some insurers will try and weasel out of it).
Sep 10 at 0:44 review Suggested edits
S Sep 10 at 18:24
Sep 10 at 0:23 review Close votes
Sep 14 at 3:06
Sep 9 at 22:12 answer added Harper - Reinstate Monica timeline score: 6
Sep 9 at 20:33 comment added Barmar Mistakes happen all the time. You fix them. If you were actually trying to defraud the insurance company, you wouldn't tell them about the mistake.
Sep 9 at 19:45 history became hot network question
Sep 9 at 17:36 comment added user71659 Changes also occur quite legitimately: you and your husband decide to swap cars, somebody gets a new job that works from home, etc. The key is to report the changes as soon as possible.
Sep 9 at 16:31 comment added Michael Hall well, usually the "main" driver is the one that commutes, so this seems like a simple mistake to be corrected rather than a legal concern.
Sep 9 at 14:07 comment added Paul Johnson There is generally a grace period, especially for details like this. Call them up ASAP. Stuff like this is routine.
Sep 9 at 12:39 comment added PMF What are you afraid of when telling them to fix it? That they charge you for the change? As long as nothing has happened, you should always be able to request a change of the contract (maybe you change the job and now need to use the car as well)
Sep 9 at 12:28 answer added Lag timeline score: 15
S Sep 9 at 11:44 review First questions
Sep 9 at 13:05
S Sep 9 at 11:44 history asked Trish CC BY-SA 4.0