NO!
if you have gico then no but any other car insurance will yes
No. The loan on your car has nothing to do with a DUI. If you do get a DUI, most probably your insurance renewal premium will go up a lot. But, your insurance has no reason to cover your auto loan. It is up to you to make your loan payments with or without a DUI on your record.
Nope, once you sign, the car is yours. You can still pay the loan for the car without insurance.
Is the car on Private property or parked in a public place? On your Private property, without valid Tags and Without a loan against it then no insurance required.
UH..NO!
Yes. The leinholder (the person who has to pay the loan) and the lender (the person who receives the loan payments) is not related to the person insured to drive the vehicle.
Yes
A person cannot include someone's income on a car loan, without their bad credit affecting the outcome of the loan. If another person is placed on the car loan, that other person will also be run through a credit check. This includes cosigner applicants.
Unless the person died while wrecking the car, no. I believe you are looking for a type of life insurance that pays the loan balance upon death of the owner of the loan and vehicle. This is mortgage life insurance.
Probably, some companies only require that you have care custody and control of the vehicle in order to be the named insured. Other companies require that you be the registered owner. The problem that arises is that the finance company usually wants to have the evidence of insurance be in the name of the person responsible for the loan. If you are the named insured but not the name on the loan then the loan company may require that the person on the loan also be on the insurance policy as a named insured. The best way to do this is to have the person that owns the car get the insurance and list you the driver as the principle operator.
re: auto insurance, no; auto insurance is written on the vehicle, not on a person.