If you have been convicted of any moving violations then you will.
Yes. You are driving so you are responsible.
That depends on a number of variables, including:Amount of the deductibleValue of the vehicleAmount of coverageAge of the person(s) driving the vehicleYour own driving record
Yes, you can get a ticket. And just like if you were driving your own car, you can risk having points on your record and an increase in insurance.
NO! Buy your own insurance! Or get him to!
Depends on your driving record, the color of the car, the year model, how much coverage you want, and other things.
no
Each state has there own laws on how long driving after suspension stays on your driving record. For example, a suspension stays on record for three years in California, but in Michigan it stays for seven years.
Owning a car is different to driving one. A driving license is needed to drive the car and in most jurisdictions, it is not needed to own a vehicle.
"To own a car you need a license, thus, you need one to insure a car. They check your DMV driving record when you get insurance plus they count how many years driving as part of the method to determine insurance cost." Is the first sentence accurate? I am disabled and don't drive, but have an attendant drive me. Can I legally own a car, and have an attendant included on the vehicle insurance?
please change thıs sentence to dırect speechFred insisted that he would be driving his own car in the rally.
You can get a car insurance unless you will buy a car.
Don't do it.You should never register another person's car in your name. Think about it. The only reason would be they are unable to register it in their own name because they have established a poor record for some or many reasons. If the car is in your name you are completely open to legal liability and you will be giving them a green light to destroy your own driving record.