Quote:
Originally Posted by sazamataz
I'm glad you told me that... my insurance company promotes themselves by offering 'free 90 day EU coverage'. i didn't realise they HAD to include it!
They also won't supply me with a green card- the advisor on the phone said the GC has been 'abolished'.
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A Green Card is two things - an extention of your full policy terms beyond the territories included in the original policy, and - an Internationally accepted proof of
Insurance within the countries endorsed thereupon.
Your comments raise 2 different matters here -
1. A Green Card is not required by Law within the EU as every Member State is controlled by the First Directive on Motor
Insurance which dictates that every motor policy MUST include legal minimum legal cover in every other Member State of the EU.
(For practical useage, Insurers usually include non-EU Switzerland and Norway and also the non-EU 'little bits' like Andorra, Lichenstein, Monaco, etc.)
This is automatic and must apply for the entire validity of your 'home' policy - not just the 90 days. But it is only the MINIMUM level required by Law in each member state.
Ones 'home' Certificate of
Insurance is also the proof required by other EU Police. Often there is a Statement to this effect in several languages on the reverse.
2. What your insurers are probably offering is automatic, free, FULL policy cover within other Member states of the EU for 90 days during the year.
What they are not saying, but must include, is that the MINIMUM legal cover throughout the EU applies for the rest of the year, once the 90 days expires.
Following implementation of the First Directive most UK insurers decided, or took it as reason, not to get involved with Green Cards any more. Probably because the numbers of UK policyholders going outside the EU are so small it is easier to just say 'no' than maintain the administrative capacity.
However some insurers still issue Green Cards for use in certain non-EU countries - your problem then would be whether the Green Card is accepted within those countries (eg. as ilpo stated above, Russia only recently started accepting them as proof of legal minimum
insurance - prior to that one HAD to purchase it locally. I still do!).
Quote:
Originally Posted by sazamataz
I've tried a few different websites including the one you recommended. I get the idea that as long as you get a letter of invitation whilst you are still in your own country, you can apply for the visa in the embassy of Kazakhstan or Poland or wherever you happen to be...
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Sorry - beyond my knowledge and something I certainly have not heard of before.
The website I mentioned is not a commercial agency - they are just the obligatory handling agent of the RUS Embassy you MUST apply through. They do nothing other than handle applications that you, or commercial agencies, prepare and present. They will tell you the rules but will not arrange Invitations or deal with paperwork for you, other than check what you present.