About 10 years ago in the state of Georgia, a purchaser would have 3 days to return the vehicle he/she just purchased. The laws have changed since then, once you pay for the vehicle (cash, finance, lease, collateral swap, etc.) and take delivery (driving the car off the lot or having the car delivered to you) of the vehicle, you have forfeited your rights to return the vehicle. If you are uncertain of what your purchase intentions are, then just make sure you do not accomplish both acts (purchase and delivery). Laws may vary from state to state. Hope this helps.
The Ohio law does not provide for returning a newly purchased vehicle. The individual dealer may allow you to in order to promote goodwill. They are not required to allow you to return it, however.
You should consult a attorney for this, they would be able to help you out
Five years in jail. Don't do it, kids.
As with any contract, you have three (3) business days to cancel the agreement.
You can't unless the selling dealer agrees to let you return it. The cooling off period or buyer's remorse law only applies to unsolicited sales, and not to vehicles.
Assuming that you had an insurance policy in place on your previous vehicle and that policy is still valid then you usally have a specified period of time to get that vehicle added to the policy. If your current policy included Comprehensive and Collision coverage's then they should extend to the newly purchased vehicle as well. If the old policy didn't have those coverage's and you need them for the newly purchased vehicle then I wouldn't wait to add it to your existing policy as you may not have the coverage that you need.
No, you cannot. From the question, "What is Georgia lawforreturning a newly purchased vehicle?": About 10 years ago in the state of Georgia, a purchaser would have 3 days to return the vehicle he/she just purchased. The laws have changed since then, once you pay for the vehicle (cash, finance, lease, collateral swap, etc.) and take delivery (driving the car off the lot or having the car delivered to you) of the vehicle, you have forfeited your rights to return the vehicle. If you are uncertain of what your purchase intentions are, then just make sure you do not accomplish both acts (purchase and delivery). Laws may vary from state to state.
No, you cannot.
Yes, If your currently insured vehicle is traded in or upgraded then the newly purchased vehicle is automatically covered for the first 30 days with the exact same coverage as the vehicle you traded in. Within these thirty days you are required to notify your insurer of the vehicle change. Failure to notify the company within the required time period can void or nullify coverage on the newly acquired vehicle. Not that if the Newly purchased vehicle is an additional vehicle purchase, meaning it is not substituting or replacing an already insured vehicle, it may not be covered at all until added to your policy. This will vary by your state insurance laws. you have to notify your insurance company and they will transfer it to you until you can take it in to them to see and fill out forms.
As you do not state the make and model of vehicle all that can be said is that you remove the old one and replace it with a newly purchased one.
If you are insured with another vehicle, you probably have a clause covering newly purchased vehicles. Otherwise - no.
Oklahoma does not allow a consumer to return a newly purchased vehicle. Once the contract is signed the car belongs to the buyer.