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best cars to insurance for teens FAQ


Good cars for first timers (America):

USED:
2006+ Honda Civic
2007+ Honda Fit
2007+ Nissan Sentra
2007 Volkswagen Rabbit
*2006+ Volkswagen Jetta* (Not the base S)

NEW:
Honda Civic
Honda


What is your budget? Cant really answer this question without a budget. No point suggesting a 5k car if you only have £500.


Most teens are simply added to their parents policy, that's the cheapest way. I don't think you can purchase insurance on your own. An insurance policy is a legal contract, and minors can not enter into contracts.

Also I would advise you


The best agent is the one who will sell you a policy. Some companies will not sell to anyone under 21.. The expense is a monster $$$ payment for 6 months of insurance. The reason for the hi payment is that you are expected to wreck the car before you


Just call a few browers in your area.,.. they-re the one that deal with this sort of things

best cars to insurance for teens news

Who says it's the end of the road for elderly drivers?

18.05.12

Inevitably, of course, when these senior motor-moments happen, the internet noticeboards are nose-to-tail with comments demanding that drivers be either stripped of their licences at a certain age, or else forcibly re-tested to prove their roadworthiness. The fact is, though, as a report this week has pointed out, that mass car-key confiscation would neither be fair nor practical.

According to It’s My Choice, the 72-page document published by the Parliamentary Advisory Council for Transport Safety (PACTS), there are now six million over-70s on our roads, where there were fewer than a million 35 years ago. What’s more, that figure is going to grow, as 80 per cent of 60 to 69-year-olds currently hold licences and are expected to continue driving for another 20 years. Forget the baby-boomers, these are the baby-vroomers.

Instead of setting up a massive new quango, with powers to seek out and disqualify any driver unable to read a numberplate from the required 20.5-metre distance, It’s My Choice concludes that what’s needed is “a national strategy for an ageing car-driver population”.


Source: Telegraph.co.uk