Car insurance question- how does this work????

I have an antique old car and I recently purchased a newer car as the everyday driver. When I purchased the newer car, I dropped the old car from the insurance and added the new one in it’s place. Well, now the new car is down and I need something to drive. Is there anyway that an insurance company offers a temporary insurance on the old car again only until I get the new one fixed?

You can add the older one back onto your policy, and should consider keeping it on for a variety of reasons, one of which is all cars you are the registered owner of must carry liability insurance. Additionally, you may receive a multi-car discount.

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6 Comments.

  1. the one you should be asking is ur insurance agent… not yahoo Q&A
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  2. Call your agent and let them take care of it for you. They probably still have all of your information on file for the old vehicle. If you think about it, renal agency’s are always trying to sell you their short term car insurance.
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  3. manhattanmaryanne

    they don’t offer temp insurance.
    if the older car is a true antique..you should have some insurance for it.
    ask what the price would be for two cars under one policy…
    just multiple cars…
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  4. nigelshiftright

    Just add it (the old car) to your policy and pay the double rate for a month or two, then drop the old car off when the new one is running.

    Or, take the new car off the policy completely if it’s going to be down for more than 3 months, and put it on a non-op registration and DON’T ever drive it.

    When the new ones is running, drop the old car off and put the new car back on.
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  5. You can add the older one back onto your policy, and should consider keeping it on for a variety of reasons, one of which is all cars you are the registered owner of must carry liability insurance. Additionally, you may receive a multi-car discount.
    References :

  6. Just let the agent know you need to add it back on there, and should be able to switch it out for ya… Other wise just slap some liability on there, and your good to go.
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