Generally you can not get insurance to drive a car when your license is revoked. You can however insure the car against theft and vandalism etc.
There are some companies that will write a policy if you have a suspended license as long as it is not permanently revoked.
if they dont ask, dont tell,but they could cancel your insurance if they find out later.
Unfortunately not, because the car still needs to be covered no matter the situation.
The insurance company will make you use your uninsured motorist coverage to pay for a person whose license has been revoked or who does not have insurance when they hit you, and even when it is totally their fault. Just pray the two of you don't have the same insurance company. IF the other person has coverage on their car; but their license is revoked, and you have the same insurance company, my experience is that you will be cheated out of everything that insurance company can cheat you out of. Mine even cheated me out of the car rental I had on my policy, when it was totally the fault of the driver with revoked license--told me I had only seven days of car rental to buy another car; when my policy had 30 days of car rental. This happened in Maryland, where the Insurance ADmin. protects the insurance company before the driver--this is my experience and opinion.
NO! Driving on a revoked license is deliberat act, providing that you knew you are not supposed to drive.
Typically, any auto insurance will require the existence of a valid license.
No. You must have a valid driver's license to insure your car.
Why was it revoked? It's probably a question that will come up at renewal of your other license's. Was it your home state? I think out of state licenses are based on your home state license.
Provisional license insurance is insurance for people who have a provisional drivers license. A provisional license is for drivers under the age of 16 who are driving with a learners permit or a person who has previously had a license revoked or suspended and who has recently obtained a new license.
Depending on the state laws in your state, you can receive a pricey ticket, have your drivers license revoked, have your car impounded, have your tag revoked, have your registration cancelled and these are just assuming you didn't get involved in an accident. If you were in an accident that's another long list.
Then the person that lend the car can go to jail