How exactly does one request the full terms? It seems a little... underhand they can expect you to follow T&C's and terminate your contract if they never mention how you get them in the book and never send them to you - what if the first term is "you may not turn left"? I could very well have already voided my insurance by driving to School today...
Just ask them to send you a full copy of any and all terms and conditions relating to insurance, both from them in general and for your policy in particular.
You should be sent a full copy of the terms when you take out a policy, they're long winded and hard to read though so most people ignore them and make wrong assumptions. Or like you try to justify what is really deliberately fraudulent.
that is a summary of your terms and conditions designed for sales, it's no way the legal document. You really can't rely on that. the real thing might be 50pages thick and written in 4 point size fonts.
Rung Quinn again - Spoke to a different person, she confirmed that while other insurers put a minimum age on the policy or engine size Quinn do not - I explained that my Dad was looking to buy a new car and would I be authorised to drive it to work or to another place (specifically stating I could well be doing over 5,000 miles) and she said that was ok BUT that it was 3rd party only.
Did you tell them that you are not planning on using the insured car as the main vehicle but the one your Dad buys that isn't really for him? That's quite different, from an insurance point of view, to using your Dad's everyday car every so often.
IF you crash into somebody though, youve lost your NCB, all your money spent on the car and a 500 quid excess, aswell. and FC shouldnt be more expensive, everywhere ive looked its basically the same price.
also, every type of DOC cover ive ever seen, the car being driven has to be insured aswell under another name, not just uninsured, thats going from experience with direct line DOC and the flexibell DOC option. you would get pulled over all the time every time an ANPR camera looked at your car.
So you said "I'm going to get a Seat Leon 20VT (or whatever), and register it in my Dads name. However he won't be driving it as it's actually my car and I'll be doing normal mileage. BTW the Proton I have registered won't be used at all, and is just a way to exploit a loophole in your policy!" ?
His dad is buying it, for the sake of arguement. And doesn't this policy mean the car actually has to be insured by his Dad aswell? That might be something that catches jack out.
That's what I thought, even if he has this third party insurance you would think someone has to have normal insurance on the car. Someone being his dad, the supposed owner of the car.
No that is not correct, the main driver has to be the main driver, if a young driver gets a policy with a parent (who owns the car) as the main driver who isn't they will be done for fronting.