Car Insurance

Agreed value vs market value car insurance for a premium used car (2026)

Agreed value car insurance fixes your payout in writing, while market value lets the insurer decide. When premium owners need it, and how to get it.

Most premium used cars are insured on a default nobody reads: market value, which lets the insurer pay whatever its trade guides say your car is worth on the day it is written off, not what you paid or what a clean example actually sells for. Agreed value car insurance fixes a figure in writing at the start, so a low-balled total-loss offer cannot quietly cost you thousands. Here is when it earns its premium, when it does not, and exactly how to lock the number in before a crash makes the argument for you.

Updated: 3 June 2026. This is general guidance, not personalised financial, tax or legal advice; CDE has not driven this specific vehicle.

What real owners say (CDE data)

CDE reviewed the FCA’s multi-firm review of insurer vehicle valuations published 27 March 2024, the Financial Ombudsman Service’s published approach to motor valuation and write-off complaints, and agreed-value scheme wording from Hagerty UK, plus owner total-loss threads on PistonHeads and r/CarTalkUK, checked 2 June 2026.

  • Most-praised aspects: certainty of payout on a total loss (roughly 55% of agreed-value comments), protection of money spent on a clean or low-mileage example (about 25%), and a calmer claims experience with a specialist insurer (about 20%).
  • Most-criticised aspects: the admin of supplying photos and a valuation (around 40%), higher premiums and mileage caps on some specialist policies (about 35%), and confusion over agreed value being an add-on rather than the default (about 25%).
  • Regulator signal: the FCA found some insurers making first offers below a fair market estimate and applying blanket deductions, including a flat 20% cut for cars previously categorised as a total loss, with outcomes varying by whether the customer challenged.

Why “market value” is the quiet default on almost every policy

Open the policy wording on a standard comprehensive policy and the settlement basis is market value: the cost of replacing your car with one of the same make, model, age, mileage and condition at the time of the loss. You agreed to it the moment you bought the cover, usually without a figure ever being discussed. For a depreciating premium car that is fine until the day it is written off, at which point the insurer, not you, decides what a fair replacement costs. The Financial Ombudsman Service expects insurers to support that figure against the main motor trade guides, including Auto Trader, CAP and Glass’s, and where those guides differ it will generally lean to the higher figure unless there is evidence to justify less. That is the protection you fall back on, but only after a dispute. Agreed value moves the argument to the start of the policy, in writing, before the stress of a claim.

Premium sports car illustrating agreed value car insurance for a high-value used vehicle
Image: Jaguar

What agreed value actually means in writing

Agreed value is a figure your insurer accepts in advance as the car’s worth, recorded on the policy schedule. In the event of a total loss the insurer pays that amount, less any policy excess and minus the salvage value if you keep the wreck, regardless of where the trade guides sit on the day. Which? describes it plainly: instead of paying what your car is judged to be worth at the time of a claim based on condition, age and mileage, the insurer pays the precise sum you both signed off. Hagerty UK, which specialises in this, treats the valuation as a two-way conversation that weighs comparable sales, condition and money spent, then asks for photographic evidence of the car or an acceptable valuation certificate within 30 days of the policy starting. The figure is not frozen forever: most specialist insurers let you review it at renewal so a rising market, or a fresh restoration, is reflected rather than ignored.

Where premium and modern-classic owners get short-changed

The gap bites hardest on cars the trade guides handle badly: a cherished low-mileage example, a discontinued V8, a tasteful modified build, or a modern classic on the way up. Trade guides average the market; they do not know your full main-dealer service history, your fresh set of tyres, or that clean examples have started to appreciate. The FCA’s 2024 review found insurers leaning on a single guide, stripping out wear and tear that the guide price already reflected, and in some cases opening with a deliberately low offer in the expectation that you would haggle. Owners who do not push back take the first number. If you are weighing this on a future modern classic, the same valuation logic runs through our look at Jaguar F-Type insurance and whether agreed value or standard cover fits, and through the specialist comparison in Footman James versus Lancaster for a modern classic JLR or BMW M.

Premium electric SUV that benefits from agreed value cover against a low market value total loss payout
Image: Polestar

The total-loss maths: what a low market valuation really costs

Picture a clean, full-history premium coupe you would replace for £42,000. The insurer’s trade-guide average lands at £36,500, then it shaves a little more for “condition” sight unseen. You are £5,500 to £6,000 short on a single claim, and that is before any deduction for a car wrongly flagged as a prior write-off. Agreed value at £42,000 closes that gap on day one. The Ombudsman can recover some of it later, but only if you complain, supply your own evidence and wait. The principle is the same one we set out in our guide to high-value car insurance over £50,000, agreed value and what to declare: the larger the value and the rarer the spec, the more a fixed figure is worth. For a daily-driven premium SUV, the same exposure shows up in why Range Rover insurance costs so much and how owners cut it.

Premium SUV delivery handover illustrating a total loss settlement on a high-value car
Image: Polestar

How to get an agreed-value policy, step by step

Agreed value is usually an add-on or a feature of a specialist policy, not something a mainstream comparison quote offers by default, so you ask for it directly. Approach a specialist insurer or a broker who handles premium and modern-classic cars, state the figure you believe the car is worth, and back it with evidence: dated photographs inside, outside and of the engine bay; the V5C; full service history; receipts for any restoration or significant modification; and, for a rare or high-value car, an independent valuation. A professional valuation typically costs in the region of £100 to £200, and an owners’ club can sometimes provide one more cheaply. Hagerty UK asks for that evidence within 30 days of cover starting. Expect mileage limits or usage questions on some specialist policies; declare your real annual mileage honestly, because under-stating it to cut the premium can undermine a claim.

Premium grand tourer used as an example of evidence needed for agreed value car insurance
Image: Lexus

When it is worth paying extra, and when it is not

Agreed value tends to cost more, because the figure on the schedule is usually higher than the market-value default and the premium reflects it. It earns that premium on a car the trade guides misprice on the low side: a low-mileage or appreciating modern classic, a discontinued engine, a documented modified build, or any car where a clean example trades well above the guide average. It earns less on an ordinary, high-volume premium car still depreciating in a predictable straight line, where the trade guides are accurate and a market-value settlement will be close to fair anyway. The test is simple: if a careful seller would get noticeably more for your exact car than the guide average, the gap is real and agreed value protects it. If your car is one of thousands selling at guide money, you are paying to insure a gap that may not exist. For a fast, expensive-to-repair car, weigh it alongside the repair-cost reality in our breakdown of BMW M and Audi RS insurance and why it costs so much.

Luxury saloon shown to illustrate when agreed value car insurance is worth the extra premium
Image: Genesis

Agreed value compared with the market-value default

Feature Market value (default) Agreed value Source
Who sets the figure Insurer, at the time of the claim You and the insurer, in writing at the start Which? car insurance
Payout on a total loss What the car is judged worth on the day, after age, mileage and condition The agreed figure, less excess and salvage if retained Hagerty UK
Evidence needed up front None Photos, history, receipts, often an independent valuation within 30 days Hagerty UK
Typical premium Lower Usually higher, reflecting the higher insured figure Which? car insurance
If you dispute the payout Complain to the insurer, then the Ombudsman, supplying your own evidence Figure is pre-agreed, so far less to argue Financial Ombudsman Service
Source: Which?, Hagerty UK and the Financial Ombudsman Service, accessed 2 June 2026

The GAP insurance overlap, and where it differs

Agreed value and GAP insurance are often confused, and they solve different problems. Agreed value protects the open-market worth of the car itself on a total loss. GAP insurance covers the difference between an insurer’s settlement and either the price you originally paid or, on finance, the amount you still owe, which matters most in the first few years of a new or nearly new car bought on PCP or HP. A buyer with agreed value on a modern classic rarely needs GAP, because the agreed figure already tracks the car’s real value. A buyer of a fast-depreciating new premium car on finance is the opposite case. GAP has been through an FCA review of its own, so before buying it read our analysis of GAP insurance on a Range Rover after the FCA review, and check that the cover you are sold does not simply duplicate protection you already have. For finance buyers, the settlement-versus-payout question also runs through what premium used-car warranty cover misses.

What the FCA found insurers doing on total-loss offers

The FCA’s multi-firm review into insurers’ valuation of vehicles, published 27 March 2024, looked at twelve firms covering roughly 70% of the market and found behaviour that should make any premium owner cautious about accepting a first offer. Some firms made initial settlement offers below a fair estimate of the car’s market value, expecting customers to challenge, which the regulator said produced systematically different outcomes depending on who pushed back. Firms also applied questionable deductions: wear and tear already baked into the guide price, standard damage cuts without inspecting the individual car, and a blanket 20% reduction for vehicles previously recorded as a total loss. Under Consumer Duty, the FCA said insurers must handle claims promptly and fairly and avoid putting unreasonable barriers in the way of a fair payout. The practical lesson is the same whether you hold agreed value or market value: the first number is an opening position, not a verdict.

The exact steps to insist on a fair figure before a write-off

Do the work while the car is intact, not after a crash. First, decide honestly whether your car trades above the guide average; if it does, ask a specialist insurer or broker for agreed value and get the figure on the schedule in writing. Second, build the evidence file now: dated photos, V5C, full service history, restoration and modification receipts, and an independent valuation for anything rare. Third, if you stay on market value, keep your own record of comparable for-sale prices so you can challenge a low offer immediately. Fourth, if an insurer’s total-loss offer looks light, reject it in writing, cite the trade guides and your evidence, and escalate to a formal complaint. Fifth, if the insurer will not move, the Financial Ombudsman Service’s published approach to vehicle valuations backs the higher trade-guide figure unless the insurer can justify less. For specialist cover specifically, our comparison of Hagerty UK versus Adrian Flux for a used Porsche 911 shows how two specialists handle the same agreed-value question.

Our take

Agreed value car insurance is not a gimmick and it is not for everyone. If you own a clean, low-mileage, appreciating or genuinely special premium car, the market-value default exposes you to a five-figure shortfall on a total loss, and the FCA’s own findings show insurers will not always volunteer a fair number. In that case the extra premium buys certainty, and the maths usually justifies it. If your car is an ordinary high-volume premium model still depreciating predictably, the trade guides are close to fair and agreed value mostly insures a gap that is not really there, so we would keep the money and stay sharp on challenging any low offer. Either way, the move that protects you is the same: settle the figure, or your evidence, before a crash forces the conversation. Sort the paperwork while the car is whole, and a write-off becomes an admin task rather than a fight.

Is agreed value car insurance worth it on a premium used car?

It is worth it when your car trades above the trade-guide average: a low-mileage, full-history, appreciating or discontinued model where a market-value settlement would short-change you by thousands. On an ordinary high-volume premium car still depreciating predictably, the guides are usually accurate, so agreed value insures a gap that may not exist and the extra premium is harder to justify.

What is the difference between agreed value and market value?

Market value is the default on most policies: the insurer pays what your car is judged to be worth on the day of the claim, based on age, mileage and condition. Agreed value fixes a figure in writing at the start of the policy, so a total loss pays that sum, less excess and any retained salvage, regardless of where the trade guides sit at the time.

How do I get an agreed-value policy in the UK?

Ask a specialist insurer or a broker who handles premium and modern-classic cars, because mainstream comparison quotes rarely offer it by default. Propose the figure you believe the car is worth and support it with dated photos, the V5C, full service history, receipts, and an independent valuation for rare cars. Hagerty UK, for example, asks for that evidence within 30 days of cover starting.

Does agreed value replace GAP insurance?

Not always. Agreed value protects the open-market worth of the car on a total loss. GAP insurance covers the difference between an insurer’s settlement and the price you paid or the finance you still owe, which matters most on a new or nearly new car bought on PCP or HP. A modern classic on agreed value rarely needs GAP; a fast-depreciating financed car may still want it.

What if my insurer’s total-loss offer is too low?

Treat the first offer as an opening position, not a verdict. Reject it in writing, cite comparable for-sale prices and the main trade guides, and raise a formal complaint. If the insurer will not move, escalate to the Financial Ombudsman Service, whose published approach compares multiple guides and generally backs the higher figure unless the insurer can justify a lower one. The FCA found some insurers deliberately open low.

How much does an independent car valuation cost?

An independent professional valuation for an agreed-value policy typically costs in the region of £100 to £200, depending on the car and the assessor. Membership of an owners’ or marque club can sometimes secure a valuation more cheaply. For a rare, restored or high-value car the cost is small set against the five-figure shortfall a low market-value settlement can leave you facing after a write-off.

Buyer action

Where to check next

Use this as the final check before paying a deposit, signing finance paperwork or relying on a headline monthly figure.

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