The fees and fines are the responsibility of the registered owner.
You can sue the driver if you want to get the money back
Since the renter is not the owner, the renter needs to notify the rental company immediately. The renter is also going to be held responsible for the impound fees and it could be several hundred dollars.
You cannot; these are in place to control the speed of the rental vehicle, and will not permit the rental vehicle to go above 79 miles an hour, which is dangerous.
It goes to collections. If you are still in possession of the car after you agreed to return it, then it will be reported stolen, as in "theft by fraud." First they max out your cc during the process of reporting it stolen. (Embezzled) If caught in the car you will be charged to GTA and rental companies almost never drop the charges.
You can purchase car rental insurance from the car rental shop. Places like Enterprise and Budget rental car allow you to buy their insurance while you have their vehicle.
Leasing a vehicle is more like a rental. You never own the vehicle even at the end of the lease. At the end of the lease, any damage (scratches, etc.) are the responsibility of the leaser to pay for repairs. If there is a mileage limit you will be charged for the over mileage.
Rental Costs. Tax and Local Assessment. Payment for gas and oil. Transportation to and from rental.
Any car rental site such as Budget.com or Avis.com can give you a good rate on a rental vehicle. Enterprise Rental and Alamo are also good places to ask for pricing on vehicles for the weekend. Most rental locations carry a variety of vehicle types including vans.
Each rental trucking company has different rates and they are usually based on the size of the vehicle, gas used, and where the vehicle will be traveling to.
One can find a vehicle rental when one goes to vehicle rental shops like Avis, Thrifty, Hotwire, Rent A Car, Budget, etc. At the same time, one can rent online by going to the website of the shops mentioned above.
No, you would have needed to purchase rental car, or rental reimbursement coverage, unless this was a theft, in which case some policies provide rental car under comp coverage for total vehicle thefts.
if the renter has insurance on another vehicle and are using/renting a vehicle, (few exclusions on this but doubt they would apply)......in place of their vehicle.......the insurance on their vehicle (that is in the shop or whatever).....transfers to this rental car, as: non-owned auto, temporary substitue vehicle etc.........so whatever or whomever their vehicle is insured with will cover you (assuming they are at fault of course).......rental car companys will not rent to someone without a copy of their insurance (liability)........a person can purchase a 'damage waiver'' from the rental car company, but that only covers the rental car its self........if something very out of the ordinary occured and vehicle was rented to an uninsured person or an exclusion in their policy removes them some how......then the rental car company policy would come into play........i have never seen a rental car companys insurance pay a claim (always the drivers)........ unless it was an employee driving the vehicle..........so find out who the company is that the driver has........ Most states require that all vehicles be insured against damages that are caused BY THAT VEHICLE. The auto rental companies are required to carry liability insurance on any vehicle they rent. Don't let anyone get away without paying for the damages to your vehicle.
Enterprise