A second driver on an insurance policy refers to an additional person who is authorized to drive the insured vehicle alongside the primary driver. This can be a spouse, family member, or another individual who may occasionally use the car. Adding a second driver can affect the insurance premiums and coverage, as their driving history and risk profile are considered by the insurer. It's important to ensure that all drivers are listed to maintain valid coverage.
As long as you are listed as a driver on the policy and an accident occurs in a covered vehicle, then yes you will be covered under the terms and conditions of the policy just as any other driver on the policy.
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.
If you are excluded as a driver on a policy that means that no coverage for any type of claim will be paid on any vehicles on that policy. It also means that the insurance company will not pay for anyone else's damages caused by the excluded driver. Excluded mean no coverage at all.
If your daughter does not live with you but drives your vehicles then she is still required to be listed as a driver on your policy. The policy states that all household members and regular drivers must be listed. A regular driver is anyone who drives your vehicles sometimes. This does not mean you can add a car titled to her on your policy even if she is listed as a driver but she is still required to be listed as a driver on your policy. If she is an adult driver it probably won't cost you anything anyway.
You either are a horrible driver or you didn't pay your bill. Or something else..
Are you asking if the insurance can kick off a bad driver? Or are you asking if you can have the insurance policy dropped on a person? For the first one, I think if they really wanted to, they could drop you. But my guess is the company would just charge the bad driver horrible rates... And for the second question yes, you defiently can have someone removed from the policy. (i guess it does depend on policy though)
A deferred driver is a listed driver who has a policy elsewhere and therefore is not used in the rating of the policy from which they are listed as deferred.
yes. plain and simple. you lent the car and then they are a permisable driver. As long as they are not n excluded driver or a resident in your house. It depends, if your policy is a named driver & the driver is not named, your policy will not respond. If your policy is a standard auto policy then yes, your policy will respond.
Is your boyfriend listed as a driver on your auto policy? Does he live with you? If you do not have him listed as a driver on your policy and he is a regular driver or if he resides with you he must be listed as a driver on your policy. This is a part of your policy terms. If you do not abide by the policy terms the company can deny the claim due to material misrepresentation. This means if you lie to them they don't have to pay the claim.
You can obtain insurance without a driver's license by adding a named driver to the policy who has a valid license. This person will be the primary driver on the policy, and you can be listed as an additional driver.
If they are not on your policy then they are not covered.
If you mean are your medical bills covered -- and assuming your state requires medical coverage on auto insurance policies -- then, no, you wouldn't be covered by any policy of the driver's since, of course, no policy exists. However, if you have your own auto policy, that policy would then become primary. After that, your health insurance would be primary. Unfortunately for the uninsured driver, if you do have to go through your own health insurance, there's a big possibility that they will go after the driver for any payments they make, particularly if a driver is legally required to carry auto insurance in your state (again, insurance that included medical coverage).