What is your car and what is your premium and who's your insurance provider ?
Thought this might be helpful information for comparisons.
I just got quoted R1190. For 2018 m240i from santam
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Interestingly my insurance never cared about colour of my car. Only age, address, insured for business or private, marital status & all mentioned aboveThings like excess, car hire, insured for trade or retail, claims history, residential and work address, colour of car, private or business use etc. all influence the premium. Many factors to consider which makes a general comparison almost impossible.
Kyle from SA Brokers Insure - have been with him since 2015.Maybe I should give Santam a call. Any decent brokers?
How did they value this?2003 BMW 330i - Insured for R180k at R450 per month
Mind sharing your age and city you stay in? That's really decent I think
I am 30, based in Durban and insured with Santam (excess is R2k, zero excess on glass).
2003 BMW 330i - Insured for R180k at R450 per month
2008 BMW M3 - Insured for R520k at R950 per month
2012 BMW X3 - Insured for R300k at R850 per month
An alternative view....
If you are a relatively safe driver, consider maxing out the excess (take the highest excess) to have the lowest monthly premium.
The saving in monthly premium, you can put towards a tax free savings investment - preferably on an offshore USD-based index tracker.
If you have to claim, you would be able to fund your excess due from your investment.
This is what I do and it has worked well.
Granted, you may need to talk to a financial advisor or someone who knows how to set up this type of investment.
If you are accident prone, then this will not work, obviously.
I pay R290/month, 2011 BMW 320d, 35, Pretoria, R2500 excess
On the point above, don't withdraw from a TFSA if you really have to - "Any withdrawal made from your TFSA is deducted from your lifetime contribution limit (which is R500 000). For example, if you have R200 000 saved in your TFSA and make a full withdrawal, your total remaining lifetime contribution will reduce to R300 000. With this in mind, it makes sense to view your TFSA as a long-term investment vehicle" (source).
But it does make sense to max out the excess and save that cash elsewhere.