This covers you for driving the vans while carrying your own tools and other goods for your business.
Fleet van insurance can provide cover for two or more vans owned by your business under a single commercial fleet insurance policy.
This means you only need to manage one policy, rather than having separate cover for each van.
If your employees drive company vehicles it's your responsibility to buy insurance for your entire fleet.
Fleet van insurance policies can offer quite a bit more than a standard car insurance deal.
Much like a commercial van insurance policy, there are options to include carriage of your own goods, haulage (i.e. carrying other people's goods) but you get more flexibility by choosing the fleet option.
Fleet van cover lets you add and remove vehicles at any time - either permanently or temporarily.
You can name employees individually as drivers on the policy or choose the ‘any driver’ option - although this generally costs more.
As well as standard vans, you can add other sorts of vehicle to your policy - including:
Tippers
Pick ups
Light vans
Vans with ingle or double cabs
Box/Luton vans
Motorbikes, minibuses, tractors, HGVs and more can also often be added to a fleet policy - just check terms to make sure your provider allows them.
Source:
This covers you for driving the vans while carrying your own tools and other goods for your business.
This covers you for driving your van to transport other people's goods - for example if you're operating a delivery service or helping people move home.
This covers you for driving the vans while carrying your own tools and other goods for your business.
This covers you for driving your van to transport other people's goods - for example if you're operating a delivery service or helping people move home.
Fleet van insurance costs are tough to pin down without understanding exactly what's being insured and running some quotes.
The good news is that we can explain how they're worked out. Put simply, your quotes will be based on:
How many vehicles you're insuring: The more vans, the greater the risk to the insurer.
What sort of vehicles you're insuring: A fleet of pick up trucks won't have the same risk as one of HGVs after all.
How you're using your vans: Running a moving firm will have very different risks to a plumbing business after all.
Your drivers' age and record: Young drivers and those who have been in several accidents could drive up the costs for everyone.
How secure the vans are: Everything from secure parking, immobilisers, on-site CCTV and more could affect the cost of insurance.
For smaller fleets of five vehicles or fewer, check what individual policies would cost too."
Decide on the cover you want for your fleet from the following options: Fully comprehensive; Third-party, fire and theft; Third-party only.
Work out what additional protection your vans need – this comparison shows whether insurers offer: Replacement vehicles, Breakdown cover, European cover.
Look for a policy that covers the way you use your vans – for example, not all insurers cover vans used for haulage or courier services.
Will different drivers drive the same van? If yes, you need a policy with any-driver cover.
If you have several vans, fleet insurance is usually cheaper than the combined cost of separate policies, but not always.Â
Compare as many fleet insurance quotes as possible, but also include individual van insurance quotes for each vehicle to ensure you’re getting the best possible deal. When you’ve found the right policy, pick the one that offers the best price.
You can also try and keep the cost of your premiums down by...
Paying up front rather than in monthly instalments
Using experienced drivers with clean licencesÂ
Installing security devices, such as alarms and immobilisersÂ
Only paying for the cover you need
Changing your excess levels
You need two vans or more owned by the same business for fleet van insurance.
In terms of how many vans you can insure, it depends on the insurer, but it can cover hundreds of vehicles.
Yes, van insurance is different to car insurance. Both types of policy cover the same things but van insurance can protect vehicles used commercially and cover their contents, such as tools.
Yes, you do legally need van insurance unless you have declared your van off the road.
You can make a van insurance claim by calling your insurer on their claims line, which is on your policy documents. The process should be the same as making a car insurance claim.
Yes, you can cancel the policy if you change your mind. There is a 14-day cooling-off period, which means you can cancel and get your premium refunded. However, you may be charged an admin fee.
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