i have no ideah(:])
If youare properly insured and licensed to drive, and you have your friends permission then yes, you can drive their car.
yes, I am sure you can. But you must get the friends permission to drive. Actually, I am not sure. Try yahoo answers.
You would be covered by the insurance on your friend's car if you are driving it with their permission. To be safe, get the parents' permission, not just your friend's. It may be that your friend can't give a legally binding permission.
if there is insurance it should pay for the loss
That depends on the insurance that you and the friend have. Your insurance may cover your son in any vehicle. Same as with the friends insurance covering any driver. You just have to call and ask.
Automobile Insurance follows the vehicle. As long as there is permission to drive by the owner (insured) the coverages that are on the vehicle will apply. I agree with the first answer.
Provided that there are no exclusions in your friends policy, anybody driver their car with permission will be covered if they cause an accident. You are of course subject to the coverages and limits on your friends policy. Ex, if your friend has just liability, the insurance company will only pay for damages you cause to the other party, not damage to the vehicle you were driving.
Her insurance may state 'other drivers with the insured's permission' in which case her insurance would at least in part cover damage to other people/cars, but probably not to her own car. If her insurance does not have that clause, you are probably in trouble.
If your friend has auto insurance that covers other drivers, you're fine. If not, she will have to pay for the damage or sue you in civil court.
Car insurance follows the car. If you are using the friend's car temporarily, with permission, as a substitute for your own insured car, your insurance should cover you if the friend's insurance does not. What if my friend (who has the car) does not have insurance and I want to pay for my faults and fix it - will he be arrested?
I give you permission to go to the movies with your friends.
If the cars currently insured, you can't insure it again. Just get named on your friends policy temporarily.It is a common misconception that automobile insurance purchased in the United States for a United States driver covers the vehicle. In fact, automobile insurance only covers thedriver. As long as you are properly licensed to drive a motor vehicle (i.e., for whatever class(es) of license you were tested for and the given State has granted you), and your personal automobile insurance is valid, and the motor vehicle you are about to drive is properly registered with the given State, and, most importantly, you have your friend's permission to drive the motor vehicle (usually indicated by the State-issued, motor vehicle registration card, which your friend needs to give you while you are driving his/her motor vehicle), then you are covered by your own insurance company, regardless of what motor vehicle you are driving. If you get into an accident while driving your friend's motor vehicle, then your insurance company would pay any relevant damages (whether or not you are at fault) to your friend. If you do not have your own automobile insurance, and need to "buy" it, as the question states, then it implies that you are not legally licensed to drive, as all U.S. States require insurance in order to be licensed to drive.