ICOBS 5.3 Advised sales
Suitability
Suitability guidance for protection policies
- (1)
1In taking reasonable care to ensure the suitability of advice on a payment protection contract or a pure protection contract a firm should:
- (a)
1establish the customer's demands and needs. It should do this using information readily available and accessible to the firm and by obtaining further relevant information from the customer, including details of existing insurance cover; it need not consider alternatives to policies nor customer needs that are not relevant to the type of policy in which the customer is interested;
- (b)
1take reasonable care to ensure that a policy is suitable for the customer's demands and needs, taking into account its level of cover and cost, and relevant exclusions, excesses, limitations and conditions; and
- (c)
1inform the customer of any demands and needs that are not met.
- (a)
- (2)
1This guidance does not apply to payment protection contracts or pure protection contracts included in a packaged bank account.
1
Suitability of advice on policies included in a packaged bank account
1In taking reasonable care to ensure the suitability of advice on a policy included in a packaged bank account, a firm must:
- (1)
establish the customer's demands and needs by using information readily available to the firm and by obtaining further relevant information from the customer, including details of existing insurance cover; it need not consider alternatives to policies nor customer needs that are not relevant to the type of policy in which the customer is interested;
- (2)
take reasonable steps to establish whether each policy included in the packaged bank account is suitable for the customer's demands and needs, taking into account its level of cover and cost, and relevant exclusions, excesses, limitations, and conditions;
- (3)
inform the customer of any demands and needs that are not met; and
- (4)
explain to the customer its recommendation and the reasons for the recommendation.
Advice on the basis of a fair analysis
If an insurance intermediary informs a customer that it
gives advice on the basis of a fair analysis, it must give that advice on the basis of an analysis of a sufficiently large number of contracts of insurance available on the market to enable it to make a recommendation, in accordance with professional criteria, regarding which contract of insurance would be adequate to meet the customer's needs.
[Note: article 12(2) of the Insurance Mediation Directive]