MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Month-to-Month Vehicle Service Contracts

October 26, 2011
Month-to-Month Vehicle Service Contracts

Month-to-Month Vehicle Service Contracts

5 min to read


Vehicle service contracts have traditionally been sold as a single pay product purchased at the time of vehicle purchase. While the typical retail charge for the vehicle service contract (VSC) can be in the thousands of dollars, the availability of the vehicle finance contract provides a ready source of funds to pay the full cost.


However, there are many excellent marketing opportunities for a service contract where a finance contract is not available to pay this cost. These include:

  • Follow-up sales after delivery of the vehicle

  • Service drive sales

  • Direct market sales

  • Inability to finance the service contract with the lender

Currently, the typical approach in these situations is to use a finance company that specializes in VSCs to finance the cost over a period that is usually one-half or less of the time term of the VSC.


Month-to-month (monthly pay) VSCs are an alternative product for the above scenarios where special financing is otherwise needed. This product may also appeal to customers who do not want to pre-pay the cost of the VSC.


A month-to-month vehicle service contract provides one month of coverage for each monthly payment. The contract is generally renewable to a predetermined mileage and/or time limit and the monthly rate may be guaranteed for some or all of the term. The contract can be designed to renew at lower coverage levels and/or a higher price level as the covered vehicle ages, thus making longer terms more attractive to the administrator or underwriter.


Month-to-month VSCs are not likely to replace single pay VSCs in situations where funds are available to pay the total cost upfront for one obvious reason— cash flow. With a single pay contract, all parties involved in the transaction (dealer or seller, administrator, insurer, agent, etc.) get the money upfront instead of waiting for their share of the monthly payments. Most, not all, of the parties involved prefer to collect upfront.


Another disadvantage is that in some states an obligor can offset claims against cancellation refunds for a single pay VSC. This money is not available in a month-to-month VSC, so it must be considered in pricing.


There are advantages to the obligor for month-to-month over single pay contracts. In the case of cancellations, the refund due to the consumer will be much smaller since there is very little unearned exposure. This eliminates most of the unearned portion of the fees paid to every other party involved in the sale of the VSC and the possibility that that party won't be around to pay its share of cancellation refunds.


Another advantage is the ability to non-renew or adjust rates due to the experience of the service contract. For example, a problematic vehicle could be surcharged or non-renewed if there is a persistent issue of claims.


Currently, there are two approaches to determining claim eligibility under a month-to-month VSC— time only and time plus miles. Using time only, a vehicle is eligible so long as the monthly payments are made through the date of claim, subject to the overall mileage limitation. If eligibility is determined by time and miles, then each monthly payment extends the vehicle eligibility by one month and a certain number of miles. In this case, it is important to have some mechanism to make a reasonable estimate of miles driven per month at time of sale and to get updated information from the customer after initiation of the month-to-month VSC. If the customer is and continues to be a regular service customer, this information will be readily available at the time of sale and for adjusting the miles per month purchased in future months. If not, this information can be obtained by having the customer provide regular updates using an online form.


The time only approach is simple to explain and easier to administer at time of claim because a customer won't be in a position of needing to make extra payments to extend mileage eligibility in the event that he didn't purchase enough miles per month. However, the time only approach does create a subsidy of high miles per month drivers by low miles per month drivers. A simplistic example illustrates this point.


If the overall term and mileage limit for a month-to-month VSC is 72 months and 72,000 miles from time and mileage at purchase and the monthly charge is $40, a customer that drives 3,000 miles per month will exhaust the coverage in 24 months and pay a total of $960, but a customer that drives 1,000 miles or less per month will exhaust the coverage in 72 months and pay a total of $2,880.


A third approach that is not exactly month-to-month is providing coverage for the customer's maintenance interval. The service contract can be sold at the time of regular vehicle maintenance and designed to cover the time and miles to the next regular maintenance visit.


This month-to-month product design is very new, so there are issues to overcome for it to be viable in the long term. These issues include: adapting administration systems to capture monthly payments and make appropriate adjustments to determine claim eligibility and obtaining regulatory acceptance. The possibility of anti-selection will probably lead to a slow roll-out of this product within each market to ensure that customers will make enough monthly payments to cover any potential shortfall caused by early claims.


The month-to-month VSC has tremendous potential to favorably increase VSC sales to the many customers who are not able or would not prefer to finance their contract. In time, systems will be updated, regulators will be taught its value to consumers and the month-to-month VSC will become one of the standard products offered by VSC administrators.

Subscribe to Our Newsletter
No form configuration provided. Please set either Form ID or Form Script.

More Actuary

Industryby StaffFebruary 23, 2023

Tougher Standards Mean Fewer IIHS Safety Awards

Fewer vehicles earned the honor in 2023 than last year as group toughens safety evaluation standards.

Read More →
Actuaryby StaffMarch 2, 2021

Kelley Blue Book Names 2021 Best Resale Value Award Winners

An average 2021 model-year vehicle will only retain about 40% of its original value after a five-year ownership period.

Read More →
Awardsby StaffFebruary 19, 2020

Autotrader Names 10 Best Car Interiors Under $50,000 for 2020

To help car buyers look beyond a new car’s outward appearance and focus more on the beauty within, the experts at Autotrader recently named the 10 Best Car Interiors Under $50,000 for 2020.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
SponsoredDecember 18, 2019

Top News of 2019

For dealers, F&I professionals, agents, and P&A executives, 2019 was a year to remember. Get caught up on 12 months’ worth of industry news with this review of our most-read stories, starting with a Carvana-size shakeup and continuing with big deals, big lawsuits, and big gains for the F&I segment.

Read More →
ActuaryOctober 31, 2019

Will ASC 606 Impact Me?

Released in 2014 and in effect private companies as of this year, the FASB’s ASC 606 will have a significant impact on the P&A segment. Actuarial experts break down the new standard and answer your FAQs.

Read More →
Actuaryby StaffJanuary 3, 2019

Spireon Wins IoT Breakthrough Award

Spireon’s GoldStar GPS solution earned the company Connected Car Product of the Year honors in the 2019 IoT Breakthrough Awards.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Summit Updatesby StaffMay 9, 2018

Ziegler: They Said I Was a Crackpot

Jim Ziegler holds Uber responsible for the death of an Arizona woman who was run down by an autonomous SUV in March, but he doubts executives will face criminal charges. In They Finally Killed Somebody , the Alpha Dawg traces the so-called demand for driverless vehicles to the handful of businesses that stand to gain the most — including some of your closest partners. Click here to read the story.

Read More →
Summit Updatesby StaffMarch 8, 2018

Ziegler to GMs: Don’t Sell Yourself Short

If you are an executive general manager making $500,000 a year, this video is not for you. If not, listen up, because Jim Ziegler is here to help. In an exclusive to Auto Dealer Today , the Alpha Dawg lists the 20 Things a GM Must Do Every Week to become an executive GM, take your dealership to new heights, and maximize your personal income. Click here to read the story.

Read More →
Ad Loading...