icScotland - Bumped-up insurance claims 'surge'
icScotland logo
icScotland News Sport icHomes
Search icScotland for:
Today's UK news
News  UK  Today's UK news  Article

Bumped-up insurance claims 'surge'

01:05, Feb 11 2012

 

Exaggerated home insurance claims have surged in the last year amid the tough economic backdrop, research has suggested.

Axa said the industry is seen as a "soft target" for people who want to make extra cash, as households continue to face pressure from high living costs and deteriorating employment conditions.

The insurer carried out a study which found that 9% of people who said they had made a claim in the last five years had exaggerated it, typically adding an extra £607 on to their totals. The figure is up from around 7% of people who said they had bumped up a claim when a similar study was carried out a year ago.

Exaggerated claims related to televisions, particularly before big sporting events, jewellery or cash which never existed, people stating they had designer goods stolen when they were actually fakes and people claiming they had a freezer filled with fine dining ingredients such as lobster and steak rather than the reality of fish fingers and peas.

Respondents had made claims to home insurers across the board, not just Axa, and the company estimated from its findings that 200,000 UK consumers made exaggerated home insurance claims last year.

Less than half (45%) of people surveyed consider an exaggerated claim to be dishonest and more than one in 10 people would be more likely to consider trying to bump up a claim than they were three years ago.

Axa also found that men are nearly twice as likely to have made an exaggerated claim than women. Around 12% of men who had made a claim at some point said they have stretched the truth, compared with around 6% of women.

Steve Gaywood, head of fraud at Axa, said: "As an industry we are well aware that these things go on and we are introducing measures all the time to try and reduce the amount of fraud that occurs."

He added: "Ultimately, if consumers get caught out they run the risk of having the whole claim turned down as well as facing problems getting insurance in the future. It is not a victimless crime, honest customers end up footing the bill through higher premiums as insurers pass on the additional costs of inflated claims."

Axa has previously said that exaggerated claims can add as much as £13 to every home insurance policy.

 
M&S targets cut amid profits fall
Watchdog: Give women over 40 IVF
Ofsted: Maths teaching must improve
Inflation set to hit 20-month low
Allies on path to end Afghan war
Six hurt as gas blast destroys home
William 'tore up wedding guestlist'
UK voices fears over Yemen massacre
MPs hit out at nursery top-up fees
Clegg condemns social mobility myth
Give women over 40 IVF - watchdog
Asbo replacements 'won't work'
'Evil' boyfriend guilty of murder
PM reaffirms Afghan pull-out date
Daughter 'murdered out of shame'
Man guilty of murdering girlfriend
Police lost vital boxes of evidence
'Disgust' at police killer sentence
Leaders 'too close' to Murdoch
Employment law report accelerated
Top Top

Back Back

E-mail this article to a friend

Printable VersionPrintable version

 
News  UK  Today's UK news  Article
 


Copyright and Trade Mark Notice
© owned by or licensed to Scottish & Universal Newspapers Limited 2012.
icScotland™ is a trade mark of Scottish & Universal Newspapers Limited.
Please read our Terms and Conditions and Privacy Statement before using this site.

 
Advertisements
 
Jobs in Scotland: