No. But he/she can't drive it unless they are
As long as she has your permission, she can drive the vehicle and she will be covered. If she drives it more than a few times, you should add her to the policy.
Yes. All cars on the road have to be insured. If you have a learners permit, then you need to be driving with someone who does have their license and is insured.
Not in the UK In the USA the vehicle you are taking the test in must be insured for you to drive it.
Yes, but you will be driving illegally. Regarding insurance on written on a personal auto policy, if an insured driver gives you permission to drive their insured vehicle, their insurance covers your liability in an accident. The coverage extends to anyone, whether they are a legal driver, 4 years old, don't have a license, or are blind. However, you need a license to drive in order to be legal.Added: What the question is missing is a statement that you ALREADY HAVE a drivers license or learners permit. If you do NOT have one, you cannot drive under ANY circumstances. As for insurance - it is not the licensed driver that requires insurance, it is the VEHICLE which must be insured.
Some insurance companies will allow the named insured to be excluded depending on the reason. The policy would need to be in your name if the vehicle is in your name. Any drivers must be listed as drivers on the policy but not as the insured.
Yes. It is the vehicle that is being insured, NOT the owner. The owner's license status is irrelevant.
The only requirement is that the vehicle you take your test in be legally registered and insured.
Sure. If you have no valid license, you have no business driving a car at all. If you weren't driving illegally, you wouldn't have had the accident.
Yes but the vehicle would need to be insured.
No. Your having a provisional licence doesn't change your state's insurance requirements.Added: The status of your license or permit has nothing to do with whether the vehicle itself is insured or not.
If the other vehicle was parked, there was no other driver to have license, insurance or registration. The driver who hit the parked vehicle is at fault and is liable for all damages to the parked vehicle.
If the ATV travels on any public road/highway, then yes, the driver and the vehicle must be licensed ... and insured.