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.
Although it depends on your insurance, the driver is covered if driving with your permission.
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.
Yes, you are generally covered if you are caught speeding in any car as long as your driver's license is valid, your insurance is up to date, and you were not intoxicated. Your insurance covers you as a driver.
if you are listed as a driver on their policy, you are covered
As long as you have a license. The insurance follows the vehicle, not the driver.
ANY driver with permission to drive that car by the owner is covered under that car's insurance policy. Insurance goes with the car...not the driver.
It is important to understand the insurance policy that is purchased on a drivers car. The only way that an uninsured driver is covered in an insured car is id the owner of the car has that in their policy.
So long as your son has your permission to drive your car, he is covered under your insurance policy. (As long as he has a valid driver's permit or license)
If someone without a valid drivers license and without car insurance drives a car that is covered by car insurance, does that insurance pay for that uninsured driver if they have a accident?
Are you asking a question or just making a statement? "If your car was hit outside your house and the driver drove away, are you covered by insurance?" This would most likely be covered by your comprehensive insurance and you will likely have to pay a 500.00 deductable.
Comprehensive coverage does not apply to the driving of a car. It should be covered.
Not in Canada. If your license is suspended, then any insurance claim that resulted from you driving while suspended would not be covered. If the car was damaged and it was parked and not being operated, then that is covered. But not if you are driving it.