If you registered car, plate is under your name. The second you drop it, insurance will report it to state and you can have your DL suspended. You must have her register car under her name.
Yes, if she did not have valid coverage at the time the claims were submitted.
NO
You will have to sign an official exclusion document for your policy to be safe. Be aware though that when you do this you can not under any circumstance let your daughter drive any vehicle on your policy while that exclusion is in effect.
That depends on your individual life insurance needs. If you absolutely need the cash payout from the money that has built-up within your policy, you may want to drop your policy. Or, if you can't afford the coverage, or don't need the coverage. Another reason people drop their cash value policy is to get coverage through term life insurance that meets their life insurance needs at a lower price. If you drop your policy to buy a new one, make sure you have been accepted and approved for your new policy, before you cancel your existing life insurance policy.
You don't have to drop your auto insurance. Just notify your insurance company that you are no longer need the SR22 filing and they can remove it from your policy.
You will just have to contact your insurance company and ask them. Some companies will drop your policy while others will not.
My understanding is that they can only drop you for a pre-existing condition. They cannot drop you if you get seriously ill after you buy the policy.
Does Granddaughter not live with you anymore and not drive vehicle ever? If Granddaughter has moved into her own house and never drives any of your cars then yes you can drop her from your insurance. If she is still a member of your household or drives any of your vehicles then no you cannot taker her off your insurance.
Department of Motor Vehicles in any state. If you don't report when getting policy, when the insurance company does their quarterly check, the will know and they will charge you accordingly for the policy. Or, if you lied on the policy, they can drop you.
If you change vehicles on your policy it will create a difference in insurance premium. You will receive a bill or a refund for the difference in the premium. There is no policy fee just the premium change.
If you are a tobacco user, you can no longer be dropped from a policy. However, you will be charged a higher rate.
No, your points are not affected by the company, but by your driving record alone. The claims history of that policy will remain. But the parents policy premium will decrease significantly if the risk is no longer covered on their policy.