First you generally receive several tickets totalling hundreds of dollars. Then your drivers license is suspended. Next any vehicle registrations ( license plates ) you have will be revoked. In order to get your drivers license back you will likely need to obtain insurance and ask the insurance company to file an SR22 form for you. If you were the At Fault party, since you don't have insurance to cover the accident, then you need to pay out of your own pocket all expenses incurred by the other driver you hit, including property damage and vehicle repair bills and any medical expenses if you also injured someone in the other car. Failure to pay for the damages you caused will usually result in a mandatory drivers license suspension for 10 years or until such time as you pay for the damages you caused.
your still in trouble since you dont have a License,if you have a mean judge,
Her insurance may state 'other drivers with the insured's permission' in which case her insurance would at least in part cover damage to other people/cars, but probably not to her own car. If her insurance does not have that clause, you are probably in trouble.
As long as she has the correct insurance that allows the car to lent to a friend then it should cover you.
I hope you had insurance for this. The uninsured motorist will probably be broke
going to be paying the state lots of me and the owner of the other car
You pay for all damages if you were at fault, and get a citation and fine for not having insurance.
no you dont. if you do not with to file a claim you do not have to report it no you dont. if you do not with to file a claim you do not have to report it
they still will not give you money for the car accident and because of the accident they will most likely charge you a higher fee for being considered an unsafe driver.Added: There is no such thing as retroactive insurance. A policy you get today will not cover you for a collision you had last week.
Usually, if the driver had the owner's permission to drive. What happens if the car is owned by the person that has the accident but the insurance is in your name? However you no longer want to be in that relationship or to have to pay that insurance?
If you have no insurance you may get a ticket, but you will want a police report on the accident to claim their insurance, if they were at fault. so call the cops
It all depends on her insurance cover
You would usually not be covered if there was an accident and you could be cited if you are caught. It's best to have insurance whenever you drive a car.