Of course, if you need someone to hold your hand and explain everything to you before purchase then you will need to pay a higher premium for that by using a qualified intermediary such as a personal broker. I believe Hiscox have this service if they think you have enough income to make it worth their while. Alternatively, ask an amateur on here where the value of the advice is what you pay for it.
It's not a matter of hand holding.
The insurer is very specific about things during the quote phase, when it suits them. And that is correct. At this stage, if the quote forms were to be designed properly, they should state something when declaring the value and maybe provide a link to the fine print.
Even better, they could also provide an idea of the value, or what they take as market value, as per example above, some bog standard car insurances do already.
This
seems a contentious/misunderstood thing for a lot of people and if you were to provide a better service you'd try to solve that specific problem.
But I digress into a different topic such as service/product design.
I honestly never insured a new vehicle in years, so never looked at the clauses because it wasn't my case, not what I was after
My entire point is: the insurer is (again for the third time: rightly so) strict about what we declare about ourselves on the policy, threatening void as well, where, on the other hand, the way a user can provide data is not always, say, best.
I wouldn't care in most cases, to be fair. And, to be fair still, I don't. But if we want to nitpick...
