Cars in this value category should be paying a significantly more in premiums. Not subsidized by the other's.
Also, in addition to annual insurance, I think having a bond say 33% of the assessed value is fair.
No accidents and they sell the car; they get their bond back.
This is one of the reasons I thought a bonding type system for cars of high value might work.To paint all exotic car drivers in the same brush for rates.
I think when someone with an N drives a car with more than 200hp, their rates should be exponentially adjusted up.
I had a car with 400hp, 481 torque and light. Never light my kids drive it, nor let any friends even try it.
As above sort of posted, you sneeze you do 160.
Generally the older exotic owners are passionate about their cars and not doofuses street racing.
I do believe certain high power newer cars are starting with very high ICBC rates. Which I think is okay, but if you only driver your Ferrari 3,000 km a year, $20,000/year in premiums is insane.
Thankfully mine didn't make this list.
http://www.icbc.com/autoplan/optional/Documents/vehicle-list.pdf
Yeah I may push mine, but not even close to what it is capable of ( limited to 280kph).
Not all drivers of high end cars are street racers. Some have a passion for the vehicle and treat it with respect. For those people who own a million dollar car posting a bond might work for them. If they sell the car, they get the bond back. If they street race it down Knight St at 4 AM and put it through a front yard, they lose the bond. In that way, the driver is penalized and 'we' are not covering the total replacement cost for their stupidity.
I have owned very fast sports cars and have tracked them. I knew if I totalled my car on a track, ICBC does not cover it. Some tracks sell insurance for "the day" which will cover you if somehow you miss a turn and hit a wall. It's not cheap but insurance rarely ever is inexpensive.






