Yes she does. I'm a Highway Enforcement Officer. Trust me and get her insured. It's 6 points on the licence if dhe's caught without insurance. You will also be prosicuted.
2006-10-28 00:02:18
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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you're actually approximately to start to income to stress. At 17 i might propose a small extremely previous vehicle insured third occasion hearth and robbery, using fact in case you flow totally comp. the top type would be better than the vehicle is properly worth. Take a chum who's attentive to somewhat approximately autos and get a try stress. After a year without mishaps your rates will come down and it's time to get a greater useful vehicle and insure totally comp. Insurers will hit you 2 strategies: one million. you're green (that hits each and every new driver) 2. you're very youthful and as a effect like all youthful adult males at risk of take better hazards as you regulate into overconfident (as you will) and are hence an fairly undesirable risk
2016-11-26 00:33:01
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answer #2
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answered by guiteres 4
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I'm not sure where you are (US vs UK) but in the US you should list any drivers who will be driving your vehicles on your policy. If you don't list her, and she's a resident relative driving with your permission, she will still be covered by your policy. However, once your insurance finds out she is driving (if she has a claim or they find out some other way) they will add her anyway. So better to add her now, but it will hurt your wallet no matter when you add her because she is young and inexperienced.
2006-10-28 06:47:17
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answer #3
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answered by Chris 5
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I was just in an accident today in a parking lot. There was minimal to zero damage done. Unfortunatly this was the one day I decided that I would break the law and drive my uninsured car. I live in manitoba, canada. Can anyone tell me how much of a fine I will have to pay? Or if I will definently have to go to court? Different websites tell me different things and it's hard to find the answer.
2006-10-30 19:57:08
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answer #4
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answered by r055f0x 1
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Yes she has to be named under the new convention most Insurance companies now have named drivers only. Unles you have an old insurance wich is any driver
2006-10-28 14:22:12
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answer #5
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answered by FlyingPm 2
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It'll cost a small fortune too, because the insurance company will probably assume your daughter is more likely to have an accident while learning to drive. Cheaper than lessons though, I would think. My brother was going to teach me to drive but changed his mind when he found out he would have to up his insurance by about £500! (Or maybe he fibbed about that to get out of it??)
2006-10-28 00:40:30
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answer #6
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answered by ♥ Divine ♥ 6
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Yes she has to be insured. To keep the cost down add her to your insurance as a named driver. She will get the same cover as you.
2006-10-28 00:02:19
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answer #7
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answered by pete_ramsden 2
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Yes she does. Get her put on your insurance as a named driver.
2006-10-28 02:43:33
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answer #8
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answered by Mags 3
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She will have to be added to your insurance as a named driver !
If she is under 21 there may be an increase in your ins premium !
2006-10-28 00:03:51
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes add as the named driver on your policy
2006-10-28 04:08:07
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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