Re:
Takes me back to the time when i passed the driving test and, you stop at NOTHING to get motoring.
Don't be in such a rush if you cannot afford things immediately. I never had sod all in the bank whilst owning a car, it's a powerful thing.
Anyway, recently, I was online carrying out hypothetical quotes on cars that i reckon i could hypothetically afford to own/run.
What a shock, I'm the wrong side of 30, 8 yrs no claims and the cars are around 1100cc hatchbacks 55+ per gallon etc..
The quotes were anywhere from £1200 down to £333. It took a moment or two to twig that the difference was the NCB, as simple as that. Postcode, age, engine size only made subtle £40 variations in the quotes.
So, the picture was quickly built up and i tested the NCB theory, was true every time over several companies and car type.
So, my advice would be to try build up NCB as a named driver on a private car or stick with owning your own but do things slower and properly, just use your zaskar a bit longer to nip to the shops.
Even if you lose a mirror or pick up a knock in a carpark....find a scrapyard, don't claim.
A devastating fact i encountered was when i realised i had documentary evidence of 8 years no claims(that would buy me dirt cheap insurance) that was older than 24 months old, beyond that is non-legible, doesn't bloody count and therefore you have to start again with the NCB as year zero, of course doubling if not tripling the premium...boo...hooo...
Get your test passed and sort out some wheels in good time, there will always be plenty of cheap economical cars around.
even if you get a car virtually given.