No, this is an easy process. You will just replace the old vehicle with the new vehicle. The vehicle may cost more to insure, I would check with your agent to make sure.
auto insurance is generally specific to a vehicle. You can retain your policy and any benefits which you can transfer to another vehicle and cancel the old policy or retain the policy until your old vehicle is sold. As always check with your insurance company after all they do want to retain you as a customer.
The vehicle being towed has to have physical damage coverage itself in order to be covered for damage. A vehicle towing another vehicle does transfer the liability insurance to the trailer or object it is legally towing but the physical damage done to the object being towed does not transfer.
Yes.
You can find cheap auto insurance for a vehicle parked mainly in the country online from websites such as Titan or Look Insurance. Another option is Safe Auto.
Auto insurance typically covers the car, not the driver. So, if you have insurance on your vehicle, but you drive another vehicle that doesn't have insurance, you are not protected by your policy if you have an accident in that other vehicle. However, if you have insurance on your vehicle, and you lend it to a driver (from another household) who does not have his or her own insurance, they will be covered by your policy while they are driving your car.
Auto insurance follows the vehicle so the policy that is covering the vehicle you are driving will provide the coverage.
If you already have auto insurance on another vehicle, most insurance companies will cover you up to a month while you work on insuring the new vehicle. On the other hand, if you do not already have auto insurance, you had best not be driving the new vehicle until you get insurance. If auto insurance companies find that you've been driving without insurance they will raise your rates when you DO get around to it, and they'll put you into a high-risk group.
You have to have a vehicle to carry auto insurance.
If you don't own a vehicle, or have no intention of driving, you do not have to maintain auto insurance.
It is the liability portion of your auto policy that pays for the damage to another vehicle that you hit. There is no deductible to fix the other car.
If she was driving your vehicle, with your premission, it would fall under your insurance and they would have to pay for the other drivers vehicle
re: auto insurance, no; auto insurance is written on the vehicle, not on a person.