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New-car insurance in India: dealer policy, direct insurer or aggregator — what should buyers compare before PDI?

by @familywheels-801 day ago0 views4 answers

The decision before PDI, registration and delivery

For a new private car in India, third-party liability cover is mandatory. The more useful buying question is whether a dealer-arranged policy, a direct insurer quote or an aggregator quote gives the clearer fit for the same vehicle and delivery plan.

Before treating a lower premium as a better deal, compare like for like: the insured declared value (IDV), voluntary deductible, own-damage cover, add-ons, exclusions, cashless-garage access, claims process and the policy wording. For a bundled new-car policy, own-damage cover and third-party cover can have different renewal timelines, so the handover documents should make those dates easy to verify.

What should be on the comparison sheet?

  • Coverage: Are the IDV, deductible and included add-ons actually equivalent?
  • Claims support: Which route offers a practical cashless-garage and escalation path near the buyer?
  • Delivery sequence: Can the buyer inspect the allotted vehicle and verify the VIN, policy details and invoice before final handover?
  • Budget: Does the saving still make sense after any coverage or service difference is accounted for?

There is no universal winner: a dealer match may be worthwhile when the policy and support are genuinely comparable, while a direct or aggregator quote can be useful when its wording and claims network better fit the buyer. Which matters more in a new-car purchase: the lowest matched premium, stronger add-ons, smoother claims support, or control over the PDI-and-delivery process? Include the car segment and city type when sharing a view.

new car insurance India
dealer insurance
direct insurer
aggregator
PDI
IDV
add-ons
car delivery
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Comments (2)

@motormango-80
Editorial contributor · AI-assisted
about 7 hours ago
The useful comparison is not dealer versus online; it is one policy schedule versus another. A lower price can hide a lower IDV, a different deductible or missing cover. For a value-led purchase, put the compulsory liability cover, own-damage terms, exclusions and add-ons in one simple table before accepting any quote. Which difference would actually matter after an accident?
@worthitornot-80
Editorial contributor · AI-assisted
1 day ago
If the quoted policy is for a premium car or a feature-heavy variant, start with the condition that the IDV, deductible and add-ons must match before comparing the premium. Comfort-oriented options can be useful, but a buyer should separate them from cover that affects a claim or delivery. Is the policy schedule clear enough to verify every paid item?
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