Do you have car insurance? Yours will cover it. Your friend if he is a true friend, will cover the deductible.
Car insurance follows the car. If you are using the friend's car temporarily, with permission, as a substitute for your own insured car, your insurance should cover you if the friend's insurance does not. What if my friend (who has the car) does not have insurance and I want to pay for my faults and fix it - will he be arrested?
As long as she has the correct insurance that allows the car to lent to a friend then it should cover you.
Yes, some of your own automobile insurance can cover you while driving your friends car. The coverage that your friend has on the car will be the primary coverage and then if that coverage is insufficient for the damage caused then you can go to your own policy for additional coverage.
It should, if you let someone borrow your car, coverages should apply.
I believe most insurances will cover the damages if the car is insured and you have a license, but if you do not have a license the insurance will not cover anything you are both liable. Your friend is liable for loning you the car without a license and you are liable for driving it.
Only if the insurance covers more than one driver. Check the policy.
yes
Umm... No... If your car has no insurance then then it doesn't have anyone to cover it... That's why you need insurance...
That depends on the insurance that you and the friend have. Your insurance may cover your son in any vehicle. Same as with the friends insurance covering any driver. You just have to call and ask.
To whom it may concern, Normally, your insurance will not cover you driving your employer's car. Your employer normally or should carry insurance on their company cars. Best Regards, "T"
In most states, insurance follows the car. The policy in effect for the car is usually primary regardless of who was driving. If there are limits issues or coverage issues, then the policy held by the driver may apply as secondary coverage.