It's a liability only policy. Non owner means you do not own a car so all you can get on it is Liability and some medical coverage.
Yes, it's called a Named Non Owner Policy.
A named non-owner policy. Or a dealers blanket policy (what car dealers use)
A named non-owner policy provides liability and Uninsured/Underinsured motorist coverage for those that do not own a personal vehicle of their own. Say your company provides you with a company car to use for your job. If you were to borrow a firends car or rent a car while traveling, you have no personal liability coverage of your own. A named non-owner policy solves this problem A non owner policy is a smart move. First of all,,,say later on ( a year or two) you become a vehicle owner, insurance companies use prior insurance to determine discounts. It will cover your (libility) in another vehicle that you have been given permisive use of also.
If you don't own the car, you cannot be a named insured; however the owner may be able to add you to the policy as an additional driver.Since you will not be a named insured, the insurer would not be required to notify you of any policy cancellation or change in coverage.You should instead obtain a named non-owner policy to be certain you have appropriate liability coverage.Check with an agent licensed for the jurisdiction in which the car will be registered.
They can only give that kind of information to the owner of the policy
This is the terms of the contract for this type of policy. It is a secondary coverage policy and there for it will pick up after the vehicle owner's insurance policy pays first. You need to read your policy or look at the terms before you purchase it if this is not what you want.
Yes. The owner takes out the policy and adds on people who drive the vehicle. The owner can be listed on the policy as a non-driver which might make the policy cheaper.
This Depends on the type of insurance policy. A standard Auto Insurance Policy will most likely pay for permissive use so long as the driver was not excluded from the owners policy, and was not committing a felony at the time of the accident. If the Owner has a Named Driver Policy ( AKA: Drivers Policy, Non - Owners or an Operaters Policy ) then it will likely NOT pay for the drivers accident as it only covers the driver named on the policy. It will probably pay, then promptly cancel. Getting insurance just became very expensive.
You aren't required to carry insurance in Oklahoma unless you own a vehicle; your license will be safe.
The Named InsuredYes. It is a legal issue. A homeowner's policy insures the named insured for damage to their home. This assumes the named insured maintains an insurable interest in the house, meaning that they have not sold it to someone else. The policy cannot be transfered to a new owner.
A non-owner policy is only used if you do not own a vehicle. How can you have hail damage on a nonexistent vehicle? The answer is no there is only liability on a non-owner policy. For full disclosure, I own and operate a small Independent Insurance Agency in Central Georgia and have for the past 22 years. I worked a an agent with a direct writer for 3 years prior to that.