The policy for most car rental companies, is that any additional drivers have to be 25 or older. They must sign on to the rental contract at the counter and there is usually an additional driver fee. This fee is sometimes waived for a spouse or a fellow employee if it is a business rental and you have a corporate account with that car rental company.
Yes, you can legally drive someone else's rental car as long as you are listed as an authorized driver on the rental agreement.
Yes, you can drive someone else's rental car as long as you are listed as an additional driver on the rental agreement and meet the rental company's requirements, such as age and driver's license validity.
No, you cannot legally drive a rental car under someone else's name unless you are listed as an authorized driver on the rental agreement.
Possibly rental, rented, rent, lease, leased, leasing, borrowed, not yours someone else's, NOT YOUR OWN PROPERTY.
If you allow someone else to drive your rental car, you are still responsible for any damages or violations that occur while they are driving. It is important to make sure that the person driving is listed on the rental agreement to avoid any issues.
As long as this person is listed in the rental contract as driver, yes. However, if you allow someone else drive the car without been listed as driver nad this person gets in an accident, the rental insurance will deny the claim and you will be responsible for all damages.
Also known as a lessee.
Yes, someone else can pick up your rental car from Enterprise on your behalf as long as they have the necessary documentation and authorization from you.
It depends on the policy in the USA. In most European countries only named drivers can drive a car regardless of insurance policy - rental cars are the exception for obvious reasons.
You rented the car so you have all the responsibility and liability. If a person cannot rent a car themselves because the rental company won't rent to them, another person should not volunteer. There is nothing wrong with going to the rental agency and telling them you are renting for the other person, but that doesn't give the other person the right to drive the car. You may also be the driver of a car rented to someone else, but again you should make the rental company aware of that. They want to know that whoever drives the car is a licensed driver with an acceptable driving record. If the other person gets into an accident and is charged with an offence, that goes against them, not you.
Swinton Insurance offers temporary car insurance in Pennsylvania so that if you drive someone else vehicle or a rental then you're covered in the event of an accident.
The condo association has to adhere to the by-laws. If the by-laws agree to rentals, and condo can be rented. If there is no rental provision, then not even 1 condo can be rented. It's all-or-nothing.Another AnswerThe governing documents, more commonly the CC&Rs and any amendments, can specify a 'rental cap', meaning that a defined number of units can be rented at any one time.Your governing documents will specify this number of rentals allowed, and your board or property manager can help you discover and understand this guideline.If your association is small and there are fewer than 10 units, only one rental may be allowed. If, however, your association is larger, a larger number may be permitted.Lenders review the rental percentage in an association before offering mortgages, and when the rental number is too high, all else being equal, a mortgage may be denied if the rental percentage is too high.There may also be other factors involved in the rental question in your association.