Try Liberty Mutual. If you can't find local office try Libertymutual.com.
No. Remember that insurance follows a vehicle first, operator second. So, without having a car to insure, no rate can even be detected to begin with.
Not only can, but you should. The Insurance policy does not follow the driver, it follows the car.
You cannot insure my car. You can insure YOUR car. While you can purchsae more than one insurance policy, you will only be paid for the actual loss you have. If you have $1000 in damage, each would pay $500. Minus each company's deductible. It says that in your policy.
No. By law only 1 policy is allowed per vehicle.
Answer:As long as you have the owners name on the insurance as owner you can insure it under your own policy
No - you can not insure a vehicle that isn't titled to you.
No. You can't insure a vehicle that you do not own. You must have an insurable interest in a vehicle in order to insure it.
No, you can not. In order to obtain insurance policy, you need to be in possession of a valid driver's license.
It depends. Some insurance companies insure the driver and any car they drive whether it's a rental, or borrowed with permission from the registered owner. Other insurance companies insure the car and only the drivers specified on the policy. Check with your insurance. It's possible your insurance follows you, in which case the damage you caused to the car you were driving and the car you hit would be covered.
To do this you can go to an insurance website such as admiral which gives you a discount on your second car
No, the coverage not specific to a classic car but you can insure it. Texas does not have property taxes so you will pay more for other things like insurance.
ABSOLUTELY NOT. You cannot insure a vehicle that you do not own on your insurance policy no matter what kind of coverage you have. Your insurance policy will not pay anything even if you have added the vehicle on your policy without their knowledge.