No, the insurance is on the car, not the person.
If you own a car and buy insurance to cover it, you are covered although the insurance is on the car. You can allow other people to drive the car and they will then be covered even if they don't have insurance.
Yes a person can get a reduced rate if they only drive once in awhile. It does not matter how often a person drive the car.
Yes, if there is an accident.
Call their agent and add the other person to their policy.
We need to know what he's insured for. If he's insured to drive the car, then yes. If he's insured with life insurance, then no. But normally it's the car that carries the insurance.
Provisional car insurance is a policy that can be purchased by a person who is learning to drive in another person's car. The insurance covers the learner driver without risking the insurance of the owner of the vehicle. Companies that offer provisional car insurance can be located through an insurance broker.
Your auto insurance should cover you anywhere you drive to. As long as the person insured is driving the car there should not be any problems.
If your parents put your name on their car insurance, that is you as a named drived you will be able to drive their car. This is often a cheaper way of insuring you to drive a car than having you as the person that takes out the car insurance. You will not be covered to drive other cars however. Their are some insurance companies now aimed at insuring young drivers which is something that you could look into.
no
If you're liscensed, and have permission from the person under which the car is insured, you are able to drive the car if it is insured even if you yourself are not insured
Not without insurable interest in a car. If you do not have a car, you do not need to have insurance. If you rent a car, you can get insurance for the rental, but that is a temporary policy. If you have permission to drive the car, you should be insured under the policy of the person from whom you borrowed the car.