I recommend you this site where you can compare quotes from different comapnies: INSURANCE-QUOTES-FREE.INFO
yes, I am sure you can. But you must get the friends permission to drive. Actually, I am not sure. Try yahoo answers.
no just your friend dose
Please think about it. It is car insurance. So you wont.While the previous answer is correct, if you want to be able to drive another persons car, either YOU need insurance, or the owner of the car must have it insured for all drivers. I only say this because growing up I knew people without cars who would drive a friends car, and they had car insurance only so they could drive their friends car.
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.
no
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.
In the UK you must have insurance that covers you to drive the car in question.
If youare properly insured and licensed to drive, and you have your friends permission then yes, you can drive their car.
Yes, but that shouldn't be needed. You can occasionally drive a friends car and be covered under their policy without being listed as a driver. If you are a regular driver of your friends car then see about being added as a driver to your friends auto policy. I have a question about that answer. Does the driver need to have his own insurance policy? if he drives his friends vehicle maybe once or twice a month? .... In the UK:Yes, you can.Also:Using the car owners policy to drive the car is often allowed, as is the option to use your own insurance on another car as insurance often includes "borrowing a car with the owners permission" and "lending it to someone" . However the insurance is often only "3rd party." so if you crash the car, the car it's self is not covered, and you must either fix the car at your cost, or lose a friend. YOur best bet is to either speak to your insurance company, or get the car owner to speak to their company, and sort it out properly.
No, the insurance has to be on your car not someone elses.
I hope you're asking this before you need to know, not after.In most cases the insurance is on the car, not the driver, so it would be the car owner's insurance. Generally, the insurance will cover someone driving with the owner's permission, but there could be an exclusion for someone with a learner's permit. You and your friend should know before you drive the car. If we have a driver's license and covered under an insurance company for our car, can we still drive a friends car which is covered under a different insurance company. And which company will cover the car in this scenario.
if hes not i wouldn't suggest letting him drive the car