Audio By Carbonatix
The year 2022 was a tough one for people and businesses around the world.
Ghana struggled with a weakened Cedi and astronomical price increases. Traders adjusted their prices multiple times and banks raised lending rates significantly. The Ghana insurance industry showed goodwill with the market and held back from increasing the cost of insurance protection.
Effective January 1, 2023, the regulator of insurance, the National Insurance Commission (NIC), has implemented new Motor Insurance prices (tariff) which all insurers are mandated to apply.
Among other things, the pricing change is aimed at safeguarding the financial health of car insurance companies so they can continue delivering value to customers.
Before we go into how the new pricing works out, let’s try and understand how car insurance companies managed under the 2022 recessive economic conditions.
Price and premium will be used interchangeably in the write-up to refer to how much you pay to insure your car, and “car” to refer to all vehicles.
How the 2022 economic turbulence impacted car insurance
Insurance claims involve replacement parts, materials, and labour. The cost of parts and materials, all imported, rose sharply during the year. Repair labour costs also surged due to the rising cost of living in the country.
In addition to increasing costs, insurers were confronted with significant losses in the value of investments. Typically, the returns on insurance company investments augment collected premiums for the settlement of claims.
Losses on investments leave insurers in a difficult position with regard to their vital role of helping customers recover quickly from financial loss in case of accidents.
The new car insurance pricing is different in one notable way
The new pricing categorizes vehicles into 2 groups based on the year of registration:
- Group A: vehicles registered before 2020
- Group B: vehicles registered from 2020 onwards
How much you will pay depends on which group your car falls in. For example, if you have a Toyota Corolla saloon car which you use for social and private commuting purposes only, you will pay ¢423 for third-party insurance if the registration year is before 2020.
If you registered in 2020, you will pay ¢468. Until the new pricing came into effect on January 1, all private cars used for social and private commuting purposed paid ¢327.
You can CLICK HERE to check how much you will be paying for your car within 1 minute.
What the new prices mean for your pocket
You will be paying up to 43% more for third-party car insurance than you did in 2022. Given that the third-party price is a factor in determining comprehensive insurance premiums, you will observe an increase in your comprehensive insurance cost as well.

Pay small-small: a way to make it easier on your pocket
Good news! You can sign on to an instalment payment plan with Brolly and pay small-small instead of making an annual payment in advance. You can get fully comprehensive insurance for the whole year and pay in installments of up to 12 months. You could also pay for third-party insurance in instalments up to three months.
We wish you an amazing new year!
Freda@Brolly
email: freda@brolly.africa
Latest Stories
-
U.S. and Ghana Armed Forces strengthen medical readiness at SETAF-AF Best Medic Competition
1 minute -
Earlier passage of BoG’s Amendment Bill could have prevented haircuts – Dr. Asiama
47 minutes -
Economic stability gains were hard-won through discipline and institutional effort – BoG Governor
1 hour -
GCB Bank rewards customers at first “Pa To Pa” Promo Draw
1 hour -
EC sets March 3 for Ayawaso East by-election
1 hour -
Call for Applications: WikkiTimes launches Anas Aremeyaw Anas AI fellowship
2 hours -
GPL 2025/26: Dreams hold Hearts as Phobians record 8th draw
2 hours -
If you attempt to bribe a police officer now, he will disgrace you; he wants a promotion – IGP Yohuno
2 hours -
This Saturday on Newsfile: NPP Presidential primaries, Ofori-Atta, Sedina detention and LGBTQ-tainted manual
2 hours -
BoG to deepen media engagement and reward quality economic reporting – Governor
2 hours -
Photos: The Multimedia Group thanksgiving service 2026
2 hours -
BoG declares 2025 ‘Year of Restoration’ as inflation crashes and reserves hit 27-year high
2 hours -
2026 is the ‘Year of Action’ for Petroleum Hub project – Dr Toni Aubynn
3 hours -
Sedina Tamakloe set for January 21 US court hearing – Victor Smith
3 hours -
‘Ministerial signature is not ceremonial ink’ – CDM questions Education Minister’s role in curriculum saga
4 hours
