no
Insurance follows the car, not the driver. As long as the car is insured and you have permission from the owner to drive it, you are covered.
In Florida, you are required to have a certain amount of personal injury protection and property damage insurance to drive.
If the car you are driving is insured then you are not driving without insurance.
Most tags are given to the owner of the car for a year.
Yes, if there is an accident.
NO. oNCE YOU HAVE TITLE TO THE CAR YOU ARE REQUIRED TO HAVE YOUR OWN INSURANCE.
Usually the insurance on the vehicle covers any driver who has the permission of the owner of the vehicle to drive the car.
== == YES. It is mandatory ( that means you DON'T HAVE TO HAVE IT ) or you cannot drive.
At least in Canada you can not. -The owner of the car has to have insurance stating that someone else can drive their car. I imagine this law may differ from country to country.
A non-owner's insurance policy basically enables someone to get insurance so they can get a license or for any other purpose they need to get auto insurance without owning a car. It covers you in any car that you drive, even if you do not own the car. It is basically a general insurance for drivers because some people who drive do not own cars.
No, if it's on a temporary basis, you have the permission of the owner, and the owner has liability insurance on the vehicle.
Not in the UK it's not ! If you knowingly drive a car without insurance - you're committing an offence - punishable by a fine & points on your licence. The vehicle's owner could also be in trouble for 'aiding and abetting' a criminal offence.