You need to add your son as soon as he is behind the wheel driving. At that point, he can get into an accident, and you want to make sure it is covered.
Back in the horse and buggy days (at least the original VW Beetle days), when I got my license, you only had a permit for 30 days. I guess nobody cared much back then. Now, with young drivers having a permit for 6 months, you would be amazed at how many fender benders happen.
Here is the thing. Assuming your son lives in your household, he has to be listed on the policy to be covered. Every carrier I know of in California does not provide permissive user coverage for household members. Some carriers may not rate him until he is fully licensed, most will.
If he is rated, they should take into consideration that he is an extremely limited driver until he is licensed.
My suggestion is to make sure you have an old 'beater' car that only has liability coverage, then make sure you carry decent limits of liability and property damage coverage. Make sure he gets rated on that car, not the Corvette or the Lexus.
Dan
Back in the horse and buggy days (at least the original VW Beetle days), when I got my license, you only had a permit for 30 days. I guess nobody cared much back then. Now, with young drivers having a permit for 6 months, you would be amazed at how many fender benders happen.
Here is the thing. Assuming your son lives in your household, he has to be listed on the policy to be covered. Every carrier I know of in California does not provide permissive user coverage for household members. Some carriers may not rate him until he is fully licensed, most will.
If he is rated, they should take into consideration that he is an extremely limited driver until he is licensed.
My suggestion is to make sure you have an old 'beater' car that only has liability coverage, then make sure you carry decent limits of liability and property damage coverage. Make sure he gets rated on that car, not the Corvette or the Lexus.
Dan