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auto insurance is generally specific to a vehicle. You can retain your policy and any benefits which you can transfer to another vehicle and cancel the old policy or retain the policy until your old vehicle is sold. As always check with your insurance company after all they do want to retain you as a customer.
Just call up your insurance company/agent, and tell them that you request his name to be removed from your policy. They will then issue you a new policy w/ id cards. Some insurance companies require that the 18 year old has acquired auto insurance elsewhere before removing them from the parent's policy. This may prove difficult for the parent who may be forced by the insurance company to carry auto insurance on their child indefinitely until such a time when insurance can be obtained.
The policyholder should contact the insurance company and cancel the policy - you might get a partial refund if the premiums are paid up-to-date!
45 dollars
Sure, if your parents will want you attached to their policy, and if you are living with them.
They must have some sort of insurance coverage, whether their own policy or on someone else's.
No. Most insurance companies do not allow a minor to have their own policy because an insurance policy and application are a legal contract and a minor cannot generally be party to a legal contract. I do know of a couple of insurance companies that overlook this and allow even a 16 year old to buy a policy.
If you are old enough to have a driver's license, then you are old enough to have auto insurance ... simple as that!
A 16-year-old is not legally able to contract with the insurance company unless he has been emancipated. Which leaves him to work with his parents or another adult to acquire the insurance.
Almost every auto insurance company requires your parents to sign your policy or for you to be listed under theirs. There are no known insurance companies who will insure a 17 year old by themselves.
Sure, The policy owner can add any driver to their auto insurance policy, In fact, If you are a regular driver the owner is required to disclose such and list you as a scheduled driver, otherwise the insurance company could deny coverage in the event of an accident involving an unscheduled driver. It does not matter if your related or not.
Generally, The least expensive way is to add your son to your existing auto Insurance Policy. Failure to add a known driver to your policy is considered Insurance Fraud by concealment and could subject the insured to cancellation, non renewal and can void all coverage under your policy. Basically any one who has regular access to your vehicle and is not scheduled under the policy is an uninsured driver.