Dairyland Insurance Company used to write these types of policies in some states through independent agents.
no
To obtain insurance to learn to drive, you can be added as a named driver on a family member's policy or purchase a learner driver insurance policy. These options allow you to practice driving legally while being covered by insurance.
Clas on an auto insuranc epolicy refers to the vehicle type. IE , sedans, sport, luxury, non-owner, etc.., etc,,,
Metlife does www.metlife.com/individual/insurance/home-insurance/landlord-insurance.html www.allstate.com does offer that option.
My sister said my mom had life insuranc through met life and her and my dad spent that already and now my dad is deceased and wonder if there is life insurance policy on him.
A deferred driver is a listed driver who has a policy elsewhere and therefore is not used in the rating of the policy from which they are listed as deferred.
An insurance policy and a will are two separate things. The policy is a contract between the insured and the insurance company. The beneficiary of the insurance policy is spelled out in the contract. The insurance company will pay the insurance proceeds to whoever is listed to receive the proceeds. The proceeds from an insuranc policy can be paid into the estate of the deceased and disbursed according to the terms of the will. The issue is who is listed as being the beneficiary of the insurance policy.
yes. plain and simple. you lent the car and then they are a permisable driver. As long as they are not n excluded driver or a resident in your house. It depends, if your policy is a named driver & the driver is not named, your policy will not respond. If your policy is a standard auto policy then yes, your policy will respond.
Is your boyfriend listed as a driver on your auto policy? Does he live with you? If you do not have him listed as a driver on your policy and he is a regular driver or if he resides with you he must be listed as a driver on your policy. This is a part of your policy terms. If you do not abide by the policy terms the company can deny the claim due to material misrepresentation. This means if you lie to them they don't have to pay the claim.
You can obtain insurance without a driver's license by adding a named driver to the policy who has a valid license. This person will be the primary driver on the policy, and you can be listed as an additional driver.
Ask an insurance company for a "broadform" policy. That will cover you for any car you drive. Yes, although it's rather pointless. Why pay for insurance on something that you don't even have or own ... there is no need. If you drive someone else's car, you are covered under their insurance policy, provided you have their permission to drive it.
If they are not on your policy then they are not covered.