In North Carolina, if you trade in a vehicle and purchase another, you have 30 days to report the transaction to your insurance carrier. You will have the same coverage on the new vehicle that you had on the old vehicle during that time. No more, no less.
It depends how old are you and whether or not you are an insured driver under the terms of the terms of your Dad's insurance policy. Your Dad's insurance agent can tell you if you are insured to drive the vehicle.
We need to know what he's insured for. If he's insured to drive the car, then yes. If he's insured with life insurance, then no. But normally it's the car that carries the insurance.
Insurance follows the car, not the driver. As long as the car is insured and you have permission from the owner to drive it, you are covered.
If the car you are driving is insured then you are not driving without insurance.
In the UK you must have insurance that covers you to drive the car in question.
If you're liscensed, and have permission from the person under which the car is insured, you are able to drive the car if it is insured even if you yourself are not insured
There is no such thing as learner insurance. Any vehicle you wish to drive must be insured if mandated by law in your State, Province, etc.
If you have insurance yourself you are insured to drive someones car. If you have an accident your insurance will cover it.
The vehicle is insured not the individual. You can pay for and obtain the insurance in the name of the owner with you listed as an insured operator.
Yes, if they have a licence, also they have to be insured on your car. Or they have to have a special insurance so you can drive others car. Hope I helped even though i dont drive.In the UK - if you have a valid policy of comprehensive motor insurance on your own own motor vehicle you will often be insured to drive third party in another person's vehicle, Clearly you would need the consent of the other vehicle owner and you should check your own policy of motor insurance. To see the different types of motor insurance policy in the UK - notably the difference between comprehensive and third party see the link entitled - "Car accident Insurance".
you are covered ONLY if the owner of the car you are driving is insured for occasional drivers. Your mother's insurance has nothing to with another 's person's car that you have borrowed.
that depends on their insurance policy