Difference between revisions of "Insurance"

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m (Djavin novienta moved page Ship Insurance to Insurance)
(I liked this page, but I've added some extra information, clarified the page's structure, and tried to more explicitly advise new players on their choices.)
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Insuring a ship can be a good idea, since in case of ship destruction you can get a refund of SOME of the invested ISK. Even if your ship was not insured, you still get a refund of some of the lost ISK, though the amount is smaller.
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Eve has a built-in '''insurance''' system for ships, which helps players hedge against the loss of ''some'' of the ISK invested in a ship. The game will provide a small insurance payout for any ship not lost to CONCORD, and players can choose to spend some ISK in advance in order to recoup more money if their ship is lost.
Insuring can only be done at a station with relevant services. Furthermore, you can decide what kind of insurance you would like to pay for. There are several options:
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The insurance system is designed, in part, to be a financial safety net for newer players, and people new to the game should strongly consider insuring the Tech 1 ships that they will be using initially. Insurance has its limits, however: it does not provide payouts at the same rate for all hulls, and it covers just the hull, not the modules and rigs fitted to the ship and not any contents in the cargo hold and drone bay.
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== Core mechanics ==
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Insurance can only be taken out at a station or player-owned structure with relevant services. To insure a ship, either:
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* right-click its hull and select 'Insure' from the drop-down menu
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* open the insurance interface from the station services window, which defaults to the right-hand side of the screen when you are docked up
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You can decide what level of insurance you would like to pay for. There are several options:
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{| class="wikitable"
 
{| class="wikitable"
|type of insurance
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|'''Type of insurance'''
|% of repaid (CCP) value
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|'''% of repaid (CCP) value'''
 
|-
 
|-
 
|no insurance
 
|no insurance
 
|40%
 
|40%
 
|-
 
|-
|basic
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|Basic
 
|50%
 
|50%
 
|-
 
|-
|standard
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|Standard
 
|60%
 
|60%
 
|-
 
|-
|bronze
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|Bronze
 
|70%
 
|70%
 
|-
 
|-
|silver
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|Silver
 
|80%
 
|80%
 
|-
 
|-
|gold
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|Gold
 
|90%
 
|90%
 
|-
 
|-
|platinum
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|Platinum
 
|100%
 
|100%
 
|}
 
|}
  
Once you pay the insurance it is valid for 12 weeks. A word of caution: insurance expiration mails may not be sent in a timely fashion. They are usually sent when you open up the insurance tab at a station and therefore it may happen that you miss the expiration date at the most inconvenient time (when your ship is lost).
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The insurance interface will list the exact costs and payouts of the options for the hull you are insuring. Once you pay, the insurance stays valid for 12 weeks.
There are also several ways you may lose your insurance (you do not lose the 40 % reimbursement), if you:
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You receive a payout and an eve-mail noting the payout immediately on the loss of the ship concerned.
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 +
'''A word of caution''': you are, in theory, meant to receive insurance expiration eve-mails, but these may not be sent in a timely fashion. They are usually sent when you open up the insurance tab at a station, and you might therefore find out that you have missed the expiration date at an inconvenient time (i.e. when your ship is lost).
 +
 
 +
There are also several ways you may lose your insurance (reverting to the basic, default 40% reimbursement), if you:
 
*repackage your ship
 
*repackage your ship
 
*trade your ship to another player
 
*trade your ship to another player
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*sell your ship on the market
 
*sell your ship on the market
 
*put your ship inside a contract
 
*put your ship inside a contract
*Suicide attack someone in High-Sec (players destroyed by CONCORD do not receive an insurance payout)
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*are destroyed by CONCORD in highsec (an important financial factor in the calculations involved in [[Suicide ganking|suicide ganking]]
  
== Why do you get a refund for only a part of the ship's value? ==
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== Reimbursement calculation ==
Firstly; you do not get a refund for any of the lost modules, cargo or drones.
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Secondly; the formula for calculating reimbursement fee is:
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The formula for calculating the reimbursement fee is:
  
 
(CCP's estimated value of the ship) * (percentage of insurance coverage) * (ship type multiplier)
 
(CCP's estimated value of the ship) * (percentage of insurance coverage) * (ship type multiplier)
  
The only known value in the above formula is the percentage of insurance coverage. The other two values are kept secret in order to reduce possible exploits.  
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The only value in the above formula known to players is the percentage of insurance coverage. The other two values are kept secret in order to reduce possible exploits.  
CCP’s estimated value of the ship is based on average values of materials used in the building of ships. Upon inspecting insurance payouts for several different ships it is evident that this value is lower than average market value of the ship (and of course, it has to be lower to prevent insurance frauds).
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Ship type multiplier maximum value is 1. It is usually 1 for beginner type ships and can be drastically reduced for more advanced ships.
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CCP’s estimated value of the ship is based on the average values of materials used in the building of the hull. Inspecting insurance payouts for several different ships reveals that this value is lower than the average market value of the ship. This prevents insurance fraud.
For example; in the time of writing this article, the average market values for a couple of ships and 100 % insurance payouts were:
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For example, in the time of writing this article, the average market values for a couple of ships and 100% insurance payouts were:
  
 
{| class="wikitable"
 
{| class="wikitable"
|Ship
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|'''Ship'''
|Approximate market value
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|'''Approximate market value'''
|100 % insurance payout value
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|'''100 % insurance payout value'''
 
|-
 
|-
 
|Rifter
 
|Rifter
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|5.714.000
 
|5.714.000
 
|}
 
|}
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 +
The maximum ship type multiplier value is 1. It is usually 1 for basic Tech 1 ships of the sort flown by new players, and can be much less for more advanced ships.
 +
 +
The practical result of this modulation of the ship type multiplier is that new players flying T1 ships with basic modules fitted lose little if they are blown up, but players flying T1 ships with full T2 module fits, or T2 and T3 ships with T2 modules, have much less of a financial "cushion" to land on. One of the less obvious factors in the persistent combat viability of T1 ships in a New Eden well populated with more advanced ship types is that many T1 ships can be flown in riskier ways, as they are highly insurable.
  
 
== Should you insure your ship? ==
 
== Should you insure your ship? ==
If you expect your ship will be almost certainly lost in the near future, definitely insure your ship (platinum insurance).  
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In other cases insuring your ship requires some thought. Let us analyze the example of rupture insurance:
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New players should consider insuring every ship: a new player can lose a ship from a single ill-informed decision such as tangling accidentally with Triglavian NPCs, meeting diamond rats without knowing what they are, or simply using autopilot to move a ship carrying valuable cargo, but any ship available to a new player will insure well, protecting them from major setbacks.
 +
 
 +
More generally, if you expect your ship might well be lost within the next twelve weeks, you should probably insure your ship with platinum insurance. An obvious use-case for this is any ship which you have fitted for PvP, and which you are about to undock for a risky roam or battle, or which you expect to fly regularly while looking for fights in the coming weeks.
 +
 
 +
In other cases insuring your ship requires some thought. Let us analyze the example of Rupture insurance:
  
 
{| class="wikitable"
 
{| class="wikitable"
|insurance type
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|'''Insurance type'''
|cost
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|'''Cost'''
|payout
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|'''Payout'''
|profit
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|'''Profit'''
|# of extensions that ensure profit
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|'''# of extensions that ensure profit'''
 
|-
 
|-
 
|uninsured 40%
 
|uninsured 40%
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|}
 
|}
  
We can conclude that if you need to reinvest in platinum insurance for more than 2 times (that is you do not lose your ship in more than 24 weeks), you are at a loss. In that aspect it is safer to invest in basic or standard insurance.
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We can conclude that if you need to reinvest in Platinum insurance more than twice times (that is, if you do not lose your ship in more than 24 weeks), you will have lost money. It might be safer to invest in basic or standard insurance if you don't expect to take this Rupture into dangerous situations.
Once you progress in your career you will probably own more than 10 or even a 100 or more ships. Insuring them all is probably not the best idea unless you are popping them daily. But in the early game, insurance may lighten the shock after losing your first ship, although even uninsured ships payout 40 %, which is not that big a difference from basic insurance (although you still get more profit by paying for basic insurance if your ship is lost).
 
  
Presented information is based on Evelopedia, ingame content and some forum posts.
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Once you progress in your career, you will probably tens and then hundreds of ships. Insuring every one is probably not the best idea. Ships which you intend to use in well-understood, controlled PvE contexts which you know and have experienced before, for instance, might not need insurance. For some expensively-fit T2 or T3 ships, the insurance payout might be so desultory compared both to the financial loss when the ship blows up and, more cheeringly, your income, that wasting time insuring them is pointless hassle. Nevertheless, it will remain wise to take out Platinum insurance on cheap T1 ships which you are undocking for risky PvP.
  
 
[[Category:Ships]]
 
[[Category:Ships]]

Revision as of 02:01, 2 November 2021

Eve has a built-in insurance system for ships, which helps players hedge against the loss of some of the ISK invested in a ship. The game will provide a small insurance payout for any ship not lost to CONCORD, and players can choose to spend some ISK in advance in order to recoup more money if their ship is lost.

The insurance system is designed, in part, to be a financial safety net for newer players, and people new to the game should strongly consider insuring the Tech 1 ships that they will be using initially. Insurance has its limits, however: it does not provide payouts at the same rate for all hulls, and it covers just the hull, not the modules and rigs fitted to the ship and not any contents in the cargo hold and drone bay.

Core mechanics

Insurance can only be taken out at a station or player-owned structure with relevant services. To insure a ship, either:

  • right-click its hull and select 'Insure' from the drop-down menu
  • open the insurance interface from the station services window, which defaults to the right-hand side of the screen when you are docked up

You can decide what level of insurance you would like to pay for. There are several options:

Type of insurance % of repaid (CCP) value
no insurance 40%
Basic 50%
Standard 60%
Bronze 70%
Silver 80%
Gold 90%
Platinum 100%

The insurance interface will list the exact costs and payouts of the options for the hull you are insuring. Once you pay, the insurance stays valid for 12 weeks.

You receive a payout and an eve-mail noting the payout immediately on the loss of the ship concerned.

A word of caution: you are, in theory, meant to receive insurance expiration eve-mails, but these may not be sent in a timely fashion. They are usually sent when you open up the insurance tab at a station, and you might therefore find out that you have missed the expiration date at an inconvenient time (i.e. when your ship is lost).

There are also several ways you may lose your insurance (reverting to the basic, default 40% reimbursement), if you:

  • repackage your ship
  • trade your ship to another player
  • put your ship into a corporation hangar
  • sell your ship on the market
  • put your ship inside a contract
  • are destroyed by CONCORD in highsec (an important financial factor in the calculations involved in suicide ganking

Reimbursement calculation

The formula for calculating the reimbursement fee is:

(CCP's estimated value of the ship) * (percentage of insurance coverage) * (ship type multiplier)

The only value in the above formula known to players is the percentage of insurance coverage. The other two values are kept secret in order to reduce possible exploits.

CCP’s estimated value of the ship is based on the average values of materials used in the building of the hull. Inspecting insurance payouts for several different ships reveals that this value is lower than the average market value of the ship. This prevents insurance fraud.

For example, in the time of writing this article, the average market values for a couple of ships and 100% insurance payouts were:

Ship Approximate market value 100 % insurance payout value
Rifter 420.000 368.250
Probe 380.000 153.481
Rupture 9.500.000 7.120.000
Retriever 25.500.000 5.714.000

The maximum ship type multiplier value is 1. It is usually 1 for basic Tech 1 ships of the sort flown by new players, and can be much less for more advanced ships.

The practical result of this modulation of the ship type multiplier is that new players flying T1 ships with basic modules fitted lose little if they are blown up, but players flying T1 ships with full T2 module fits, or T2 and T3 ships with T2 modules, have much less of a financial "cushion" to land on. One of the less obvious factors in the persistent combat viability of T1 ships in a New Eden well populated with more advanced ship types is that many T1 ships can be flown in riskier ways, as they are highly insurable.

Should you insure your ship?

New players should consider insuring every ship: a new player can lose a ship from a single ill-informed decision such as tangling accidentally with Triglavian NPCs, meeting diamond rats without knowing what they are, or simply using autopilot to move a ship carrying valuable cargo, but any ship available to a new player will insure well, protecting them from major setbacks.

More generally, if you expect your ship might well be lost within the next twelve weeks, you should probably insure your ship with platinum insurance. An obvious use-case for this is any ship which you have fitted for PvP, and which you are about to undock for a risky roam or battle, or which you expect to fly regularly while looking for fights in the coming weeks.

In other cases insuring your ship requires some thought. Let us analyze the example of Rupture insurance:

Insurance type Cost Payout Profit # of extensions that ensure profit
uninsured 40% 0 2.848.093,20 2.848.093,20 unlimited
basic 50 % 356.011,65 3.560.116,50 3.204.104,85 9
standard 60% 712.023,30 4.272.139,80 3.560.116,50 5
bronze 70 % 1.068.034,95 4.984.163,10 3.916.128,15 3,666666667
silver 80 % 1.424.046,60 5.696.186,40 4.272.139,80 3
gold 90 % 1.780.058,25 6.408.209,70 4.628.151,45 2,6
platinum 100 % 2.136.069,90 7.120.233,00 4.984.163,10 2,333333333

We can conclude that if you need to reinvest in Platinum insurance more than twice times (that is, if you do not lose your ship in more than 24 weeks), you will have lost money. It might be safer to invest in basic or standard insurance if you don't expect to take this Rupture into dangerous situations.

Once you progress in your career, you will probably tens and then hundreds of ships. Insuring every one is probably not the best idea. Ships which you intend to use in well-understood, controlled PvE contexts which you know and have experienced before, for instance, might not need insurance. For some expensively-fit T2 or T3 ships, the insurance payout might be so desultory compared both to the financial loss when the ship blows up and, more cheeringly, your income, that wasting time insuring them is pointless hassle. Nevertheless, it will remain wise to take out Platinum insurance on cheap T1 ships which you are undocking for risky PvP.