Yes, by law you are suppose to disclose all drivers in the household. If you don't it could be considered fraud. They could even deny a claim down the road, if your spouse was driving and got into an accident.
What it breaks down to, is you must disclose all drivers in the household or regular operators.
At that point you can either include drivers or exclude them.
Mark
You can definitely exclude your spouse from your auto insurance. They shouldn't be driving if their license is suspended so they don't need insurance.
Yes, You can still get auto Insurance on your own.. It is common for people to exclude an unlicensed spouse from from coverage on their Auto insurance Policy. This way you don't get penalized for your spouses driving record.
Yes, you can even insure her. It will need to be a non-standard auto policy.
Legally...no. But, for insurance purposes, yes.
If your spouse has no drivers license and does not drive, then no, you don't have to include them on your auto insurance policy. Actually, they have to have a drivers license before they can be added to the policy.
Yes, I suppose if they own the vehicle, otherwise why would they?
Not if she is listed as part owner of the vehicle.
Your husband must be on your policy to be covered. In some States you have to ad your spouse to the policy regardless if they will drive your vehicle or not.
It could be, especially if the person with the revoked license is involved in an accident because he cannot legally drive a vehicle and she committed insurance fraud by not telling her insurance company the spouse was in the household.
Companies that offer car insurance in Oregon are State Farm auto insurance, 21st Century auto insurance, Nationwide auto insurance, Mercury auto insurance, Farmers auto insurance, and AAA auto insurance.
Auto Insurance.
(autoinsurance.aains.us/low-cost-auto-insurance) maybe it will help you