CLUE (Comprehensive Loss Underwriting Exchange) Report has 7-yr history of insurance claims for properties - homes, cars, etc. They are generated by the analytics firm LexisNexis Insurance (parent RELX). The insurance professionals & underwriters rely on these reports. Property
owners can request one free CLUE Report annually online or by phone or mail by providing detailed personal information - full name, date of birth, address, city, state & zip code, Social Security number & driver’s license number.
https://www.cnbc.com/select/what-is-clue-report/https://www.investopedia.com/terms/c/clue-report.asp
Comments
Thanks.
All this time I was under the impression the insurance industry was CLUE - less.
DuckDuckGo says "Property and Casualty", as in "Insurance".
2) or does...
Aids and abets insurance companies in ripping off consumers.
(larryB seems to have reformed.)
BUT don't call the insurer to ask whether to file a claim. A friend did just that and was told that would be recorded as an insurance "incident" whether the claim was actually filed. His rates went up on renewal even when he didn't follow through with the claim.
Bottom line - Don't call your insurer for chit-chats. Anything you say may be used against you. But do call if you have complaints about rate increases or questions about policy renewables. Plan insurance replacement in advance because many insurers will give you firm quotes only within 30 days from policy replacement.
If you do change policy, be sure to call to cancel the old policy after you have new policy issued. Don't assume that old policy will lapse by itself. In fact, there are policy provisions on lapses, reinstatements, grace periods, and if both policies are considered valid, you will caught in the hell between 2 insurers.