The extra driver needs to be added onto the insurance policy. Having someone drive a vehicle and not having them on the policy can be a large problem if an accident were to happen.
The car is insured not the driver however many policies have restrictions as to who may drive the insured vehicle.
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.
Barring any exclusions in your policy if the driver had your permission to drive they will be considered an insured driver thus afforded coverage.
If its your own vehicle you can enter the reg number at www.askmid.com this will tell you if the vehicle is on the Motor Insurance Database. It will not notify you if the driver in question is insured to drive the vehicle. For use with your own vehicle only.
No, it is unwise to allow another person who is not on your policy to drive the car. If you are in the car with the driver, then it might be okay - it depends on your policy, you could call your agent to see.
To drive someone else's truck, or to drive their own? If they're leased onto a company, they'll take on that company's ICC/MC and USDOT number.
no
The correct answer to this varies from state to state. Some US states have omnibus laws that require insurance companies to extend coverage to any legal driver whether that particular driver is personally insured or not, as long as the vehicle itself is already insured by someone. [JMH] No as far as i KNOW THEY CAN'T DRIVE UNLESS THEY ARE INSURED
Is the CAR insured? If not, it's not legal.
Usually the insurance on the vehicle covers any driver who has the permission of the owner of the vehicle to drive the car.
uninsured what?? If it is drivable, of course, any driver can drive it if that driver is knowledgeable as to the mechanics and procedure needed to drive it. This is just one more question that is too vague to give a propper answer.