What if my car can't be repaired?

If there's considerable damage to your car from a covered incident, or the repair cost is assessed as uneconomical, the vehicle may be written off (also known as a 'total loss').

The amount we pay you and any deductions that apply will be different based on your level of cover. When we settle a total loss claim, we keep your damaged vehicle.

For Comprehensive cover, we'll pay you the agreed value or market value (depending on the cover you've chosen), minus any excess, outstanding owed premium and on-road costs (like unused registration and CTP Insurance)1.

If you hold Comprehensive or Comprehensive Plus cover and your vehicle was bought new and is less than 24 months old at the time of the incident, we may instead choose to replace your vehicle under our new vehicle replacement additional benefit. We can only do this if the same or similar vehicle is available in Australia at the time and the conditions for this are met.

For Third Party Property Damage cover, we will pay up to $5,000 if you weren’t at fault and the driver at fault is uninsured.

For all policies, if your claim is settled as a total loss your policy will end and there will be no refund or transfer of your premium. If you pay your premium in instalments, we'll deduct any unpaid amounts from your settlement. If there's secured finance on your vehicle, we'll pay the outstanding loan to the credit provider, and any remaining balance to you.

For more information, see our Product Disclosure Statement.

Things you should know

1 Due to different state registration refund processes, no on-road cost deductions apply to cars registered in QLD.

How helpful was this answer?