English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

The black book determins the value of the vehicle when purchased. This is what the Insurance Company uses to see what the car is worth if the car is in an accident and its a write off. 10 points best answer!!!.

2007-10-26 04:34:43 · 2 answers · asked by steve_8111 2 in Cars & Transportation Insurance & Registration

I also dont have that car now so I cant go to the ministry and buy the information package which lists previous owners as well as the black book value of the car.

2007-10-26 09:51:14 · update #1

Thanks MSAD but unfortunatly I dont have that car at this, so it wants me to pay 24.99 to get the value so once again I WANT THE BLACK BOOK VALUE.

2007-10-26 12:34:48 · update #2

AND ANYWAY i LIVE IN CANADA SO IT WONT LET ME CHECK ANYTHING BECAUSE IT ASKS FOR A 5 DIGIT POSTAL CODE AND HERE ITS 6

2007-10-26 12:36:37 · update #3

Well MSAD you get the best answer. But this is because this is the best answer if you live in the USA.

2007-10-28 04:20:10 · update #4

2 answers

Most insurance companies use a market survey program to determine the value of a vehicle. CCC, ADP and Total Logic are examples.

However, when it comes to a book value - insurance companies do NOT use: Kelly Blue Book, Red Book or Black Book.

Insurance companies (and most banks) use the NADA- National Automobile Dealers Association book. The web site is www.nadaguides.com.

The insurance companies usually do not use the web site but rather the physical book for their region (ex: south east). But the web site can give you an idea. If it pulls up 3 values - the High Retail Value is not in the physical book. The insurance companies do not use that value - forget it exists.

2007-10-26 12:00:05 · answer #1 · answered by Boots 7 · 1 0

don't matter those cars are junk if it is in good shape runs good $1000 yeyer

2007-10-26 12:02:07 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

fedest.com, questions and answers