Shopping & Style17 mins ago
car insurance
if either one of my parents added me on there car insurance.would i
1.have to have the same insurance as them.ie fully comp or can i opt for 3rd party fire&theft even though they are fully comp.OR
2.if i was to go on there insurance policy what type of insurance would i be insured for,for driving my own car.
i am 45 only passed my test in july.
cheapest quote i got insuring my car on my own is £2240 i cannot afford that.
i was on my partners additional drivers insurance but they passed away in august.
T.I.A
1.have to have the same insurance as them.ie fully comp or can i opt for 3rd party fire&theft even though they are fully comp.OR
2.if i was to go on there insurance policy what type of insurance would i be insured for,for driving my own car.
i am 45 only passed my test in july.
cheapest quote i got insuring my car on my own is £2240 i cannot afford that.
i was on my partners additional drivers insurance but they passed away in august.
T.I.A
Answers
A named driver is only an additional driver for the same car that the main driver is insured for. So, if you are a named driver on your parents insurance you can only drive your parents car / cars , the ones they have insured. If your Mum and Dad each had a car and each put you down as a named driver you could drive your Dads car and your Mums car .
You need your own...
You need your own...
23:28 Sun 23rd Oct 2011
-- answer removed --
In the small print of the trouble & strife's policy it states that cover for anyone with a provisional license is limited to third party. So when my son shortly turns 17 and we add him to her policy (my car is too powerful to add a 17 year old, my insurers giggled when I asked) even though the wife has fully comp it will only be TP if the wee lad is driving it.
No two insurers are the same and the small print has to be checked carefully, many policies with open cover have restrictions on the cover for drivers meeting certain criteria.
No two insurers are the same and the small print has to be checked carefully, many policies with open cover have restrictions on the cover for drivers meeting certain criteria.
Before you sell your car, try getting a quote for putting one of your parents on your own policy as an additional driver for your car. Doing it that way round - rather than getting a parent to insure your car with you as a named driver (which can result in a prison sentence!)- is entirely legal (even if the parent will never actually drive your car) and, somewhat strangely, can often result in a substantial reduction in your premium.
Also check out different classes of insurance. '3rd party only' (or '3rd party, fire and theft') isn't always the cheapest. Sometimes 'fully comp' can be significantly cheaper. (That's not written as 'pure theory'. My own policy is 'fully comp' because it was much cheaper than the alternatives!).
Chris
Also check out different classes of insurance. '3rd party only' (or '3rd party, fire and theft') isn't always the cheapest. Sometimes 'fully comp' can be significantly cheaper. (That's not written as 'pure theory'. My own policy is 'fully comp' because it was much cheaper than the alternatives!).
Chris