Insurers for a Ducati Panigale

Insurers for a Ducati Panigale

Author
Discussion

GreaseNipple

Original Poster:

424 posts

247 months

Saturday 3rd September 2022
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Are there any specialist insurers that I should try for a Panigale V4? I passed my test 2 years ago and am thinking its time to go for a litre+ sports bike. I've run quotes for a few bikes; KTM superduke is £550. S1000RR, Tuono V4 £700 RSV4 £900 but the Panigale V4 is £3500 and only MCE quoted. Obviously I've discounted it for this year but even adding another year of riding and NCB only brings it down to £2200. How are people insuring them?

FezSpider

1,066 posts

238 months

Saturday 3rd September 2022
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Do you research regarding MCE.

SteveKTMer

977 posts

37 months

Saturday 3rd September 2022
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I wouldn't touch MCE with somebody else's barge pole.

I'm with Bemoto which seems to be reasonably priced and includes european breakdown cover.

podman

8,920 posts

246 months

Saturday 3rd September 2022
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Try Bemoto, they was the only company that would insure me on the H2..

Walter Sobchak

5,725 posts

230 months

Saturday 3rd September 2022
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Think my insurance was with LV when I had mine, some of the quotes you’ve had for other bikes looks quite sensible for someone who’s only been riding for 2 years, surprised the Panigale is coming out so much more.

Golgarth

385 posts

204 months

Saturday 3rd September 2022
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Apparently direct with Ducati is the cheapest way to insure one... but that's only hearsay as I've not done it myself.

blade7

11,311 posts

222 months

Saturday 3rd September 2022
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Bennetts were the cheapest for my 1299, but any time I tried to speak to them on the phone, I was a in very long queue.

MrGman

1,608 posts

212 months

Saturday 3rd September 2022
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Ducati direct were by far the cheapest when I had a panigale

GreaseNipple

Original Poster:

424 posts

247 months

Sunday 4th September 2022
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Yeah I wouldn't give an insurance company £3k, let alone MCE. I'll give Ducati direct a ring, they wouldn't quote online so it's not looking good.

thatdude

2,657 posts

133 months

Monday 5th September 2022
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You might be priced out now, but give it a couple of years and you might be more favourable. One year my motorcycle insurance doubled - I asked why, and it was my postcode that was the issue, as it fell close to London and the bike theft issues were causing insurance prices to go up.

A year later, it went back down again to what I was used to paying.

Anyway, out of that lot you have some good alternative choices - the RSV4 or Tuono are just an absolutely stunning package.

Fundoreen

4,180 posts

89 months

Monday 5th September 2022
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Those price differences are quite stark for such similar performance bikes.
Ducati's just plain uncompromizing and difficult to ride? Lots of circuit success so stolen to keep racing careers going?
I dont know myself.
Still,they should just make a good bike that is banned in any racing series on earth and I bet it would be cheap to insure.

Freakuk

3,384 posts

157 months

Monday 5th September 2022
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Obviously lots of variables, value, postcode, cost to replace etc, plus your NCB and experience will all be factors.

Anything over around 20K will ramp up your insurance, so given the V4 depending upon model will break that ceiling easily will be an additional factor, you could always reduce the value, but that will obviously incur more risk on your part if you need to claim.

I've had many Ducati's (and still do), Ducati Insurance was by far the cheapest for many years but for the last few years there have been cheaper providers, I'm with BeMoto now and were considerably cheaper than DI.

Unfortunately you're buying a premium brand, which in turn means higher prices for everything, parts, servicing, desirability = potential theft etc etc.

  • *Edited to add***
If it's for the road you'll probably hate it after a while, Pani's are very stiffly sprung, and the power is high up the rev range (like most/all sportsbikes), not that it's lacking low down, but the "thrill" will cost you your license easily if caught.

To put this into perspective, I bought a new Gen3 Superduke R tail end of 2020, my Pani hasn't been ridden since I bought the SDR and I'm contemplating selling it currently.

Edited by Freakuk on Monday 5th September 13:44

TommyBuoy

1,269 posts

173 months

Monday 5th September 2022
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MrGman said:
Ducati direct were by far the cheapest when I had a panigale
Yep, ducati insurance were best for my SF V4

jhoneyball

1,772 posts

282 months

Monday 5th September 2022
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im with ducati uk insurer brokers for my 2013 1199s

jhoneyball

1,772 posts

282 months

Monday 5th September 2022
quotequote all
jhoneyball said:
im with ducati uk insurer brokers for my 2013 1199s
193 quid. Ramasis.co.uk are the ducati uk insurers

Biker9090

1,048 posts

43 months

Monday 5th September 2022
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They're generally insuring them by not having passed their test only two years ago.

Insurance is based on individual circumstances. It's immaterial where someone else insured theirs from as their circumstances will be different to yours.

You either wait, pay or carry on searching.

MrOrange

2,037 posts

259 months

Tuesday 6th September 2022
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Hunt around. A lot. Everyone’s circumstances are different.

My ‘15 Panigale 1299 costs £182 this year with Carole Nash: Big excess, decades of riding with max no claims, soft postcode, garaged, limited miles, SD only, 57 yrs old, and no px. When new, insurance was £650.

GreaseNipple

Original Poster:

424 posts

247 months

Tuesday 6th September 2022
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Aha it's the £20k thing. When I say it's worth £19,999 the price drops by £2k! I think I'll wait until I can find a second hand one and should have another years NCB by then. Thanks for the advice, good thing I don't have to just pay it

StuB

6,695 posts

245 months

Wednesday 7th September 2022
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Ducati branded insurance is actually Bikesure anyway, which is where I'm at now that MCE went pop.

Mine's a '20 V4S, old fart, rural, secured/garaged with full NCB, cost wasn't too scary at all.

Every time I ride the bike, I fall in love all over again biggrin

ITP

2,097 posts

203 months

Wednesday 7th September 2022
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A while back no-one would insure you on a 1000cc superbike unless you had a minimum of 3 years ncb. Used to have to get protected ncb because if you had a claim, and you had 4 year ncb, you’d drop back to 2 years then they wouldn’t insure you the year after!