ICOBS 6.1 General
Responsibilities of insurers and insurance intermediaries
1An insurer is responsible for producing, and an insurance intermediary for providing to a customer, the information required by this chapter and by the distance communication rules (see ICOBS 3.1). However, an insurer is responsible for providing information required on mid-term changes, and an insurance intermediary is responsible for producing price information if it agrees this with an insurer.
If there is no insurance intermediary, the insurer is responsible for producing and providing the information.
An insurer must produce information in good time to enable the insurance intermediary to comply with the rules in this chapter, or promptly on an insurance intermediary's request.
These general rules on the responsibilities of insurers and insurance intermediaries are modified by ICOBS 6 Annex 1 if one of the firms is not based in the United Kingdom, and in certain other situations.
Ensuring customers can make an informed decision
The level of information required will vary according to matters such as:
- (1)
the knowledge, experience and ability of a typical customer for the policy;
- (2)
the policy terms, including its main benefits, exclusions, limitations, conditions and its duration;
- (3)
the policy's overall complexity;
- (4)
whether the policy is bought in connection with other goods and services;
- (5)
distance communication information requirements (for example, under the distance communication rules less information can be given during certain telephone sales than in a sale made purely by written correspondence (see ICOBS 3.1.14 R)); and
- (6)
whether the same information has been provided to the customer previously and, if so, when.
In determining what is “in good time”, a firm should consider the importance of the information to the customer's decision-making process and the point at which the information may be most useful. Distance communication timing requirements are also relevant (for example, the distance communication rules enable certain information to be provided post-conclusion in telephone and certain other sales (see ICOBS 3.1.14 R and ICOBS 3.1.15 R)).
A firm dealing with a consumer may wish to provide information in a policy summary or as a key features document (see ICOBS 6 Annex 2).
Providing evidence of cover
Group policies
Under Principle 7, a firm that sells a group policy should provide appropriate information to the customer to pass on to other policyholders. It should tell the customer that he should give the information to each policyholder.
Price disclosure: connected goods or services
- (1)
If a policy is bought by a consumer in connection with other goods or services a firm must, before conclusion of the contract, disclose its premium separately from any other prices and whether buying the policy is compulsory.
- (2)
In the case of a distance contract, disclosure of whether buying the policy is compulsory may be made in accordance with the timing requirements under the distance communication rules (see ICOBS 3.1.8 R, ICOBS 3.1.14 R and ICOBS 3.1.15 R).
- (3)
2This rule does not apply to policies bought in connection with other goods or services provided as part of a packaged bank account.
5Firms are reminded that when offering a policy as part of a packaged bank account the firm may be subject to the requirements of regulation 13 (payment accounts packaged with another product or service) of the Payment Accounts Regulations.
Exception to the timing rules: distance contracts and voice telephony communications
Where a rule in this chapter requires information to be provided in writing or another durable medium before conclusion of a contract, a firm may instead provide that information in accordance with the distance communication timing requirements (see ICOBS 3.1.14 R and ICOBS 3.1.15 R).