Renew your Car Insurance Online
Renew your Car Insurance Online
with
Don’t wait until the last moment before your ICBC Autoplan policy expires.
Renew now, and receive your new policy by registered mail.
You can renew your ICBC car insurance online while still practicing social distancing during the COVID-19 outbreak.
We are available by phone and e-mail to assist you with renewing your car insurance policy as well.
E-mail us at office@kinginsurance.ca
or call us at 604-325-2282.
Please complete the form below to renew:
ICBC Online Renewal Form
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Frequently Asked Questions
This is a renewal request form. After you fill out this form, we will contact you to confirm all details and renew your ICBC insurance policy.
If you were on monthly payments before, your renewal will continue with the ongoing payments. If you would like to set up new monthly payments, please email a copy of your void cheque to info@kinginsurance.ca
Yes. Please specify the changes you wish to make in the Additional Information section of the above form.
Since September 1, 2019, ICBC requires for all household members and employees who drive your car to be listed as drivers. Listing drivers won’t necessarily mean you pay more. The premium depends on each listed driver’s experience and crash history.
You need to list the following:
- Household members and employees
- Learners
- Others, such as friends and family, who will use your car regularly
You need to have the full name, driver’s license number and date of birth for each person you want to list.
To list out-of-province drivers you will also need to know the jurisdiction of their license (for example, Alberta).
You can add or remove drivers at any time.
If a customer would like the flexibility to be able to lend their car to occasional, unlisted drivers, Unlisted Driver Protection can provide a peace of mind. It protects you from a potential one-time financial consequence should an occasional driver, not listed on your policy, cause a crash using your car.
Unlisted Driver Protection is available at no cost to the customer until an unlisted driver causes a crash using the customer’s car. After the first unlisted driver crash occurs, this Basic protection will cost $50 annually (one fee per policy; not driver). If unlisted drivers continue to crash your car, the cost of this protection will increase. For Optional insurance, on average, the cost will start at $35 depending on rating factors.
Unlisted Driver Protection does not apply to:
- household members or employees of the owner, lessee or principal driver
- people who do not hold a valid driver’s license
- people who drove any of the owner’s or lessee’s vehicles more than 12 days in the 12 months before the crash (regardless of the length of the policy).
- people who have already had an at-fault crash on any of the owners’ vehicles within the last five years prior to the crash.
If an unlisted driver causes a crash in a customer’s car and they did not have Unlisted Driver Protection or it was not applicable (for example, the unlisted driver was a household member and was therefore excluded), the registered owner may face a financial consequence of 15 times the Basic premium differential, up to $5,000 per claim.
This is based on the difference between what the customer should have paid if they listed the at-fault driver versus the actual premium paid without listing the driver. This fee is intended to represent the lost premium from not listing the at-fault driver.
If the driver has an out-of-province license, the one-time financial consequence will be a flat fee of $250.
Exceptions to the financial consequence of an unlisted driver crash will be made for medical emergencies, programs like Operation Red Nose, and mechanics or valets who may have their own garage policy.
Customers who want to occasionally lend their vehicle to a friend not listed on their policy won’t need to purchase additional protection. But if that friend causes a crash, and the customer wants to continue to have this additional protection, for the next five years they’ll need to pay for it.
If a learner driver is listed on your ICBC car insurance policy, the learner premium will be automatically added to the policy.
This premium recognizes the risk that a learner driver represents and helps cover the costs of learner-caused crashes. The premium costs $130 to $230 per year, depending on the policy address. This is one cost to cover all learners using the car, not per learner.
For learner drivers, time spent in the learner stage will not count towards their driving experience, and crashes caused by learners will not go on their driving record either. Actually, a learner’s true driving experience is considered to start from when they are licensed – at the novice stage – and driving without a supervisor.
You can find out more about the different coverages that you can have on your ICBC Autoplan policy here.