
By reviewing documents containing company information such as the insurance policy, compulsory traffic insurance label, or insurance invoice. If the car insurance was purchased at a 4S store, you can contact the 4S store for inquiries. To confirm the compulsory traffic insurance company, you can visit the local traffic bureau and inquire based on the license plate number. By phone or in person, provide your identity information to the insurance company to confirm whether there is a purchase record.

I remember it was a bit of a hassle last time I had to find my company. Start by checking the items in your own car. There's usually a small insurance sticker on the front windshield, and if you look carefully, you can see the name of the insurance company. If that's not there, check the insurance policy in the glove box—it definitely has the contact information. If all else fails, you can call the insurance company's customer service hotline and provide your license plate number and VIN; their system can look it up. Alternatively, you can visit the 4S store where you originally bought the car—their after-sales system keeps records of customer insurance. It's best to develop a habit of regularly organizing your documents and saving electronic copies of your insurance policy in your phone's photo album for easy access next time.

I'm used to finding clues from documents. The first step is to locate the vehicle registration certificate. Although it doesn't list the company's name, combining it with the ID card allows you to check insurance information on the traffic management platform. The insurance policy is crucial—I always place the paper copy in a specific spot in the glove compartment in front of the passenger seat. If you really can't find it, don't panic. Just log in to the insurance company's official website or mobile app, enter the license plate number and the owner's name, and the policy details will automatically appear. Sometimes, the system even sends renewal reminders. I've experienced losing all policy documents before. In such cases, visiting the vehicle management office counter is a reliable option—the staff will help retrieve the insurance records from the vehicle's file.

With advanced technology nowadays, I prefer handling these things on my . Just download the Traffic Management 12123 app, log in, and open the vehicle information section—the e-policy option clearly displays the insurance company. Alipay's car owner service also works; after binding your license plate, it automatically links to your insurance information. If you can't remember which company it is, simply search the Insurance Industry Association website, which has a unified query portal. Of course, the fastest way is using WeChat—many insurance company official accounts come with a policy inquiry feature. These online operations take me just three minutes, no need to rummage through piles of paperwork.


