The CUE database: what insurers see
The Claims and Underwriting Exchange (CUE) is a database run by the Motor Insurers' Bureau. It holds around 34 million records of motor, home, travel and personal injury incidents reported to UK insurers, including cancelled and voided policies. Records are typically held for 5–6 years.
Every authorised UK insurer can see this data. So when you're applying for new cover, you can't hide a previous cancellation — they already know. Misrepresenting it on a new application is itself an offence and will void the new policy.
How to legitimately get cover after a cancellation
1. Declare it accurately
Tell each insurer what happened, when, and why. Specialist brokers are used to these conversations and won't punish honesty. Mainstream comparison sites will often filter you out, but that's their problem, not yours.
2. Use a specialist broker
Specialist brokers actively quote drivers with cancellations on their record. They speak to underwriters mainstream comparison sites don't carry. Our quote partner aggregates these specialists alongside the mainstream panel.
3. If the cancellation was for non-payment, pay annually
Many cancellations are caused by failed monthly direct debits — a missed card, a switched bank account, a payment that bounced. If you can pay your new policy annually upfront, it removes the entire risk that caused the cancellation in the first place. Some specialist insurers price this favourably.
4. Wait if you can
Cancellations get less impactful over time. After 12 months without further issues, your options widen. After 3 years, premiums normalise significantly. After the 5–6 year CUE retention, the record drops off entirely.
5. Don't try to "start fresh"
Some drivers try to take out a new policy under a different name, address or with details slightly altered. Don't. The CUE database is comprehensive, the DVLA's MyLicence integration is instant, and getting caught is automatic. It also makes a future void permanent.