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Guest111
Dan I have to correct you on this,whether you received a fine or not is immaterial,you were still found guilty of a speeding offence,however the fact you chose to attend a speed awareness course rather than take a fine and points is entirely your choice,the fact is you still commited the offence!I think it is potentially dangerous for you to offer advice on something when you are not fully aware of the implications.Lets say someone doesn't declare the fact they've been on a course rather than the fine and points and later on they are involved in an RTC which is their fault and results in someone suffering a severe injury,the insurance will seize upon the undisclosed offence to avoid a big payout!Ask yourself would you rather save a few quid now or take the hit later should the worst happen? have you got potentially several million pounds to pay to someone who ends up in a wheelchair as a result of you causing an accident?You don't have to declare, and it's wrong for them to ask too.
They tell you this on your course. It has no effect on your license or driving therefore no effect on insurance either.
The insurance firms are just trying to diddle you.
Admiral screwed my on a policy I was paying for when I'd sold the car 2 years ago. Cancelled the payments and they sent debt collectors. I've literally just finished after months screwing them for all the money they've taken without my permission. Cheeky sods.
I wouldn't tell them anything to do with an awareness course.