Britsimon
Super Moderator
Since moving I'm obsessively listening to the Country music. I might have a biased opinion on the subject ;-)
LOL. Me too. I live in a town with an annual Rodeo - so yeah - country grows on ya.
Since moving I'm obsessively listening to the Country music. I might have a biased opinion on the subject ;-)
How long did you wait until you leased a car? Did you find that insurance was more expensive or was it included as part of the lease price?I'm leasing and it's pretty cool. I don't see a car as an asset (at least not here in the States) so I'm happy to pay for a car and then hand it back.
I tried that with several insurance places and no one was able to use my australian driving history - please let me know if you find one that doesAs I understand it with Australia and other countries you can import your driving history and get lower premiums on insurance has anyone here done that?
we managed to do it with Geico in CA - we did get a "no claims certificate" from our previous insurer that we brought with us - but it seems a rare occurrence. None of the other companies that quoted us would use it.As I understand it with Australia and other countries you can import your driving history and get lower premiums on insurance has anyone here done that?
Outright owning a car or two makes sense if you have kids, with the driving age being 16 it's nice to have a decent hand-me-down car for them to drive to school.
How long did you wait until you leased a car? Did you find that insurance was more expensive or was it included as part of the lease price?
As I understand it with Australia and other countries you can import your driving history and get lower premiums on insurance has anyone here done that?
It depends on state and/or insurer. Here in NC, they won't recognize any license other than a US or Puerto Rico license. So you're effectively a 16 year old and have to put up with three years of inexperienced driver premiums.
We brought our VicRoads histories in the hope it would help. It didn't. Beyond the DMV lady not really caring during our driving tests because she knew we had 20 years experience up our sleeve.
I thought it to be the other way around- auto in Florida seem so much cheaper than manual cars.Its amazing the price difference as well between automatic and manual cars there as well. You can pick up a bargain if you know how to drive stick.
In Vegas it seemed to be a significant difference even in the cheap cars. Maybe it varies by state.I thought it to be the other way around- auto in Florida seem so much cheaper than manual cars.
There is no driving license category based on transmission type.In Vegas it seemed to be a significant difference even in the cheap cars. Maybe it varies by state.
Does anyone know if you go for your drivers license is it like here where if you do it in a manual car you get a license to drive both but if it’s an automatic then you’re only licensed to drive auto?
Correction: that may not apply to CDL (commercial), but unless you plan to drive people for a living don't worry about it.Thank you!!!
I agreeUnfortunately buying a new car with a stick shift is becoming increasingly difficult. I'm surprised that insurance company doesn't treat it as an additional anti-theft device and give discounts...