No you can have your insurance card in your car or wallet in the state of New Jersey.
please vist njquoteme.com for a free quote or more faq's.
It depends on whether or not you carry comprehensive coverage on your car. Comp is an optional coverage if you own the car outright and may be a mandatory coverage if you have a loan on it. But the comp coverage would only pay for repair to the car. If you have items in the car that were stolen, however, they would actually be covered by your homeowner's or renter's insurance and NOT your auto insurance.
depending on what coverage yes it can, my cosine got his wallet stolen from his car and it did
In California, anyway, you need full insurance coverage on a car the whole time it is financed. After its paid off, you can drop a bunch of the coverage and just carry liability.
No, Kentucky law requires you to have insurance that coverage the person/people/property that you hit. It does not require that you have coverage for your own self or vehicle. Uninsured motorist coverage takes care of any damage you receive from another driver who does not carry insurance.
Depends on the type of car, where you live, what features on it, age of the car, and if you carry full coverage or not. The number of miles you drive also can count.
An Uninsured car has no insurance. Your liability coverage may follow you to it if it is a replacement vehicle but would not cover damage to the uninsured vehicle.
Personal umbrella insurance coverage and costs vary by company. Most require that you carry a defined amount of liability on your car or home policy.
You can budget your car insurance by changing the coverage that you have on your car. Liability only insurance, or your state minimum is going to be the cheapest insurance but doesn't provide much coverage. As you add coverage the price goes up.
YES, if you are in DEFAULT of the contract (NO ins. coverage) they can repo.
A bank will want full coverage. It is a state law to carry comprehensive insurance ( collision ) on any vehicle with a lien.
All rental car co. are required by law to carry at least the minimum liability coverage. Purchasing insurance from a rental place is NOT a term and/or requirement, however, liability coverage is very low, speaking of $ amount. You can use your car insurance also. Each rental car co will sell you "an additional" insurance coverage. Unfortunately, I am not aware what the charge per day is.
You only need the minimum liability insurance, what the state requires.