Yes you absolutely can still be covered if your in a situation where you get pulled over by a cop and are in a friend's vehicle. All you need is permission and reasonable belief from the insured.
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.
You have to list the drivers covered to drive your car on the policy. If not he is not covered.
As long as you are sure they have insurance and if you are listed as a drive on such insurance policy. If these cases are both yes then you will be covered under their insurance as long as you have permission to drive the vehicle.
If you have insurance on a car anyone who you give permission to drive the vehicle is covered under your insurance. This is normally covered when insurance companies ask if there will be any other drivers for the vehicle.
yes, I am sure you can. But you must get the friends permission to drive. Actually, I am not sure. Try yahoo answers.
Car insurance is usually for a specific car. So if you are covered to drive your fathers car that would not apply to your mothers car.
An Umbrella policy
If you own a car and buy insurance to cover it, you are covered although the insurance is on the car. You can allow other people to drive the car and they will then be covered even if they don't have insurance.
Yes, if he has your permission to drive the vehicle.
Insurance follows the car, not the driver. As long as the car is insured and you have permission from the owner to drive it, you are covered.
To learn, no. But you need insurance once you become a licensed driver, or you need to be covered under your parents insurance. In most if not all states, it is against the law to drive without insurance.
Most of the time they will be covered by either yours or their insurance if it's not a common practice. If I drive a siblings car here in IL, I'm covered by my insurance, but I'm not exactly supposed to be doing it daily. Call your insurance and pose the question. yes but in case of accident/if the other person drive/ your isurance does not pay.