Quizzes & Puzzles4 mins ago
Arc de Triomphe
Is it true that no motorists are covered by their Insurance to drive round this monument
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No best answer has yet been selected by daldel. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.You will find that a lot of insurance companies limit the insurance cover to third party only on this huge traffic roundabout.
You will be covered for damage/injury caused to other road users, but will not be able to claim against your own insurance company for damage to your own vehicle.
And if you do get a bump there, there is little or no chance of the other driver stopping, unless there is more than minor damage.
Check with your insurance company.
If you hire a car in France, they may not allow you to drive in that area of Paris.
You will be covered for damage/injury caused to other road users, but will not be able to claim against your own insurance company for damage to your own vehicle.
And if you do get a bump there, there is little or no chance of the other driver stopping, unless there is more than minor damage.
Check with your insurance company.
If you hire a car in France, they may not allow you to drive in that area of Paris.
This sounds suspiciously like an urban myth.
It may derive from the fact that European insurance legislation insists that all policies cover a driver to at least the mimimum required by law in any EU country they happen to be driving in.
Consequently if somebody nipped over to Paris and had an accident at the ADT they might have found that they were only covered 3rd party (they were only coverred 3rd party anywhere in France of course).
it's certainly not mentioned here:
http://www.discover-paris.info/france_driving. htm
or here:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A190009
and I've never seen it called out in any policy I've held
Can you find it documented anywhere?
Incidently what's wrong with this picture?
http://maps.google.com/?ie=UTF8&z=18&ll=48.873 755,2.295091&spn=0.00223,0.003712&t=k&om=1
It may derive from the fact that European insurance legislation insists that all policies cover a driver to at least the mimimum required by law in any EU country they happen to be driving in.
Consequently if somebody nipped over to Paris and had an accident at the ADT they might have found that they were only covered 3rd party (they were only coverred 3rd party anywhere in France of course).
it's certainly not mentioned here:
http://www.discover-paris.info/france_driving. htm
or here:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A190009
and I've never seen it called out in any policy I've held
Can you find it documented anywhere?
Incidently what's wrong with this picture?
http://maps.google.com/?ie=UTF8&z=18&ll=48.873 755,2.295091&spn=0.00223,0.003712&t=k&om=1