As Far as I knwo in order for anyone that is not you to drive your vehicles, they need to be on there, especially since this is a minor. Id check with your insurance company.
Before a driver drives a motorcycle, they need to have motorcycle insurance.
The principal driver is the person who drives the vehicle over 50% of the time. This is the main driver of the vehicle and the person who will be rated as the driver for computing the cost of the insurance.
Yes, as long as you add her as a regular driver on your insurance policy.
You need to have uninsured motorist insurance as a rider on your insurance. If not you will have to sue the uninsured driver.
Anyone who drives a truck must at least hold a liability insurance policy to cover injuries and damages. Additional policies are not required, but can be beneficial to the driver.
Generally speaking, just you. In the U.S. in most states, your insurance covers anyone who drives the car (in the insurance business, there is a saying, "When you loan your car, you also loan your insurance). However, if there is someone who regularly drives your car besides you, you may want to have them listed as a driver.
If someone without a valid drivers license and without car insurance drives a car that is covered by car insurance, does that insurance pay for that uninsured driver if they have a accident?
you ni^^a
The short answer is... yes. Insurance companies consider that situation to still be your responsibility, especially since insurance coverage follows the car first, driver second.
no
You had the answer in your question. A driver. A person who drives.
An aggressive driver is a person who drives