Lapse
Lapsed policies have no force; reinstatement may be required.
- Also known as
- policy lapse
- expired cover
Lapse Lapsed policies have no force; reinstatement may be required.
What is lapse?
Policy falls away due to non-payment. As a King Price client you will see lapse referenced on your policy schedule, in your claim documents, or in conversations with client care on 0860 50 50 50.
How lapse works
lapse is governed by the terms set out in the King Price Policy Document and the individual schedule issued for your policy. Your schedule always overrides the master wording where they differ, so the values, limits and conditions that apply to you appear there in plain English.
King Price reviews the application of lapse at every renewal, and any change to your risk profile, address, vehicle, security or claims history is taken into account. The Treating clients Fairly framework requires this detail to be communicated clearly before any change takes effect.
Example
Naledi commutes daily between Centurion and Rosebank. Debit order bounced 3 times → policy lapses. In this scenario, lapse determines the practical outcome for the client. The exact numbers depend on the cover option, the excess on the schedule and the limits set out in the policy document.
Why lapse matters
Understanding lapse helps King Price clients make better decisions about cover. It affects the monthly premium, the payout at claim stage, and the steps required before and after an incident. Getting it right means no surprises at claim time.
King Price aims to make insurance great again with plain-English wording, transparent premiums and a direct relationship with clients. Clear terminology like lapse is part of that promise.