If you purchase full coverage then all the scheduled drivers are presumed to have the same protection.
Happy Motoring
It depends on your insurance. Most insurance companies will cover all drivers even if you are not the insured driver because they have what is called permissive user. Remember typically your insurance follows you wherever you go. You may want to ask the person you are borrowing the vehicle from and see if they have all drivers coverage. If not, then you need to be a listed driver on the policy before you can drive the vehicle even if it is "fully insured". Companies like Geico, Nationwide, and Allstate typically cover all drivers....hope this helps.
In most cases if you are fully insured then your insurance will pay for the uninsured driver's car. However if it is only a third party insurance then most likely you have no cover if it is your fault. However it depends on the insurance company and the policy that you signed.
No. The car is insured and your son's policy will provide coverage up to its policy limits.
In the UK, if you are insured fully comp for your own vehicle you are covered to drive any vehicle for third party damages, unless your policy states otherwise. Some policies allow you to drive any other vehicle fully comp. Check your policy.
It depends how old are you and whether or not you are an insured driver under the terms of the terms of your Dad's insurance policy. Your Dad's insurance agent can tell you if you are insured to drive the vehicle.
A fully paid policy is a limited pay whole life policy under which all premium payments have been made. For example, a 20 pay policy is completely paid for after 20 payments. No future premiums have to be made, and the policy remains in full force for the life of the insured.
You may get a ticket for no insurance. But you can still file a claim under the at fault drivers auto insurance.
The key difference between being self-insured and fully insured is that with self-insurance, the company takes on the financial risk of providing insurance coverage for its employees, while with fully insured plans, the company pays a premium to an insurance company who then assumes the financial risk.
Most (if all of your vehicles are insured in the same company) will give you thirty days to make the change. They will need V.I.N., lien holder information, owners names, year, make, model. Owner and drivers names, birthdates, drivers licenses numbers etc.
If the owner of the policy is also the named insured, the insurer ordinarily pays the death benefit to the named beneficiary. This presumes that the policy was in force at the time of death. If the owner of the policy is not the insured, the policy becomes an asset of the estate and passes either according to the terms of the Will or, if no Will, by laws of intestate succession. The risk there, is that if the policy is not fully paid-up at that point and premiums are therefore still due, the policy may lapse at some point in the future if premiums are not paid.
The main difference between fully insured and self-insured health insurance plans is in how the financial risk is managed. In a fully insured plan, the employer pays a premium to an insurance company, which then assumes the financial risk for providing healthcare coverage. In a self-insured plan, the employer takes on the financial risk and pays for employees' healthcare costs directly, often with the help of a third-party administrator.
A company that is fully insured goes to an insurance company and buys insurance. A company that is self insured does not buy insurance and plans to pay any claims out of the companies "pockets". For instance, if you own a home but choose not to buy home insurance, you are self insured if you should have a fire.