Originally posted by SomeNewGuy
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Limited company insurance
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Science isn't about why, it's about why not. You ask: why is so much of our science dangerous? I say: why not marry safe science if you love it so much. In fact, why not invent a special safety door that won't hit you in the butt on the way out, because you are fired. - Cave Johnson -
Originally posted by gingerjediI just got mine from hiscox PI £500,000 & PL £1,000,000 and it came to £278 the companies PCG point to didn't come close.Blog? What blog...?Comment
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I have just worked out and found the best deal out of my research as below.
Considering IR35 insurance which also covers your tax liabilities along with the usual legal fees, although the indemnity limit is 50K.
I have given below the comparison of taking all the required insurances from just Qdos and a combination of Qdos and Cuance ohara via Contractor Alliance. If you are ok with just the legal fee cover may be you could just pay 60£ to cuance ohara which saves you 265£ and also saves you froom the burden of maintaing two diff companies. In my case I wanted a little bit more peace of mind so went for Qdos TLC35.
From Qdos
EL & PL for 10 million and 1 million - 152.50£
PI for 250000 - 225.00£
IR35(Incl fee and any tax liability) - 325.00£
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Total 702.50£
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From Cuance oHara (Via Contracor Alliance) & Qdos
Membership Fee(Contractor Alliance - 30£
EL & PL for 5 Million & PL 1million - 90£
PI for 250000 -184£
IR35 Ins incl fee & liabil (Qdos) -325£
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629£
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Also I have compared Hiscox for a similar specs (excludig IR35 insurance) and found it to be around 360£, so found the best way to take IR35 from Qdos and rest all from cuance ohara via Contractor Alliance
Sorry guys I cannot get the formatting right, please manage with this.
hope this helps
CheersComment
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Or IR35 cover for £120 and PI/EI/ELI for £200-ish...? Still don't see how yours is cheaper.Blog? What blog...?Comment
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Originally posted by malvolioFrom which direction? I got mine via the PCG, £1m PLI, £2m PI and £10m ELI, for £201...
It's not that I don't recommend joining the PCG, I do, but only for newbies. They don't really offer much for the experienced contractor...Comment
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Balls. They are not an insurance broker. If they weren't doing what they do, you and all the other "experienced" contractors would be signing up with umbrellas right now along with everyone else.
And I still can't quite see how £350 is more expensive than £630. Not to mention you don't need penalties insurance because there won't be any and you don't need insurance to pay the back tax becuase you won't have to. Ho hum...
BTW, the age of the average PCG member is over 40 - hardly an association for newbies.Blog? What blog...?Comment
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Originally posted by malvolioBalls. They are not an insurance broker. If they weren't doing what they do, you and all the other "experienced" contractors would be signing up with umbrellas right now along with everyone else.
And I still can't quite see how £350 is more expensive than £630. Not to mention you don't need penalties insurance because there won't be any and you don't need insurance to pay the back tax becuase you won't have to. Ho hum...
BTW, the age of the average PCG member is over 40 - hardly an association for newbies.
Secondly, you can put "experienced" in quotes as much as you like, but you know damn well that I have been in this game for a number of years so can at least talk from experience.
Finally, average age doesn't give away any information as to how experienced a contractor is. In fact, I have yet to meet any at all under the age of 30, so I'm not surprised by the average age of PCG members being around 40. From reading the forums you can also attest that the vast majority who post are inexperienced as well.Comment
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Originally posted by Cowboy BobWe all know you're a PHB so these things don't affect you, but Randall Dorling (the people who command the cheapest quote on the PCG) wouldn't even insure me at all because I deal with money transfers in my work. So much for that...
Originally posted by Cowboy BobIt's not that I don't recommend joining the PCG, I do, but only for newbies. They don't really offer much for the experienced contractor...Blog? What blog...?Comment
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Originally posted by malvolioWell there you go. I have said all along that the base price was for the average case, and that if you were in a position to cause damage - such as money factoring or building safety critical systems - then obviously the rate will go up because the actuarial risk is higher. So can we stick to arguing about the average, not the exception?
Fine. You may believe that, that's your prerogative. It's wrong in all sorts of ways but why should I care.
Randall Dorling did not offer me a higher quote. They refused to offer me a quote at all. I'm not involved with risky stock trading or anything like that. At the time I was just involved with taking people's credit card numbers. And they wouldn't insure me at all. So did you ask what the poster you quoted insurance costs did for a living? Because as far as I can tell, unless you're a management type who writes a few Word documents and types a few numbers into an Excel sheet, then they're not going to give you a quote, never mind anything within the price region that you're quoting. I'm sure the work you do is very important and very laudable, but with respect, it isn't really grounded in the real world, it isn't real work, and your insurance quotes reflect that.Comment
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I'm a service management consultant, specialising in re-organising and improving entire IT departments and advising clients, who so far have been HMG departments or FTSE100s, on how their service support operations can get to meet best-practice guidelines. So fairly mickey-mouse, I suppose.
This line of argument is getting circular and futile. You win, if that makes you happy.Blog? What blog...?Comment
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