Yes. Your auto loan must be paid whether or not the car is driveable, lost, stolen, whatever. The lender doesn't know or care if the car was totaled and the insurance company only gave you the blue book value on it - in way too many instances the car is not worth what it costs overall. Review the terms of your loan.
It depends on whether or not the car carried comprehensive insurance. If it did the auto owner's insurance would cover the tree damage, regardless of the cause. If the car did not have comp. coverage, then the car owner may be able to make a liability claim against the tree owner's homeowners insurance coverage. If the homeowner's insurance denies the claim, the car owner can still seek a civil award against the homeowner's personal assets.
Full coverage requirements have nothing to do with the age of the car. If you still make payments on the car then you still have to have full coverage. If you own the car outright, then you do not have to have it.
You do not have to purchase full coverage auto insurance in Illinois if your vehicle is paid for. You do still need Bodily Injury Liability, Property Damage Liability, and Uninsured Motorist coverage.
In most states, including North Carolina, you still have to maintain some form of car insurance coverage. If the car is paid off you can drop your policy from full coverage to liability insurance.
When your insurance is expired, You no longer have insurance. There is no grace period in which you still have coverage when your policy is expired. Your company may give you up to 30 days in which to renew your policy before they surcharge you and you lose your prior coverage discount. This is however totally at their discretion and you still have no coverage in the mean time until you renew your policy.
Yes. Off road vehicles do not require insurance.
Yes you do. No matter if you drive often or not, in the state of New York you still need insurance coverage.
No. Even if you have commercial insurance on your vehicles, you are still responsible for providing the insurance company with a list of drivers. If you do not notify them of the people driving the vehicles they can still deny coverage as you are not obeying the terms of the policy.
Any medical condition can be a pre-existing condition to an insurance company precluding coverage. However, it is possible to still get coverage and deny the pre-existing clause by providing a certificate of continuous coverage from another insurance company.
Hi, It depends on what type of insurance you had. Liability, full coverage...etc...Call your insurance company and find out.
That would depend on if your spouse's coverage is group or individual coverage. If it is group coverage offered by your spouse's employer then NO. Cobra regulations specifically say that you are not eligible if you have other employer sponsored group coverage with one exception. That is if the other coverage includes any pre-exisitng conditions clause that would deny you coverage for that illness/injury. If you have no pre-existing conditions or the pre-ex caluse does not relate to you (ie. pregnancy is a pre-ex but you are not pregnant) then you are not eligible. If the spouse's coverage is individual coverage and not group you are still eligible for Cobra.
There really is no such thing as full coverage and insurance companies certainly do not use this term. It is an old term that was used to mean you had physical damage coverage in addition to liability on your insurance. Normally it meant that you had comprehensive and collision coverage. Now there are many different coverages that you can add to your policy but still if you buy everything that is available it still doesn't mean that every instance that comes up you are covered.