Assuming you mean someone in the armed forces, yes, of course. The person must have sufficient nexus, or presence, in the state it is to be registered in. Check the RMV website for the state.
You start by....Call and ask your agent
Yes
You are suppose to register your vehicle in the state you live the most time in.
No, you can not register a car in a state that you do not reside in. It is illegal to do so, you must register your car where you live.
oh hell no
The owner of the car has to register the vehicle. The person on the registration must insure the vehicle, or be listed to drive that vehicle on a family policy. That example sounds close to insurance fraud so please correct the situation. Sell the car to the other person and they have to insure it. Actually it is 100% legal for a person to insure a vehicle registered in someone elses name so long as nothing illegal is going on...it can be the parents etc.....
No, you do not have to pay California late registration fees on your vehicle before you can register it in another state
No you can not. At least not in New York you can't. My liscense just got suspended, (for the 2nd time) (so i know what i am talking about, i have been through this before), and I can not insure or register a car in my name.
You must insure your car where it is tagged. yes you can live in one state and work in the other. if you live in the state where you work get a po box in the state where the car is tagged. If you "stay in that state", it can make you a "resident." In many states you must register and insure a vehicle used in that state if you are a "resident", under their interpretation, or if your vehicle is parked or garaged in their state for more than a minimal part of a year (e.g., 30 days in Massachusetts). At the very least, you may be required to demonstrate financial responsibility to continue exercising the driving privilege if you're caught with an invalid out-of-state registration.
In most cases you need to insure the car with a policy written in the state that the vehicle is registered. Many states require that the insurance companies report the vehicles that they are insuring to the state for cross reference of motor vehicle registrations. So if you live in state A and your vehicle is registered in state A but insured in state B then state A will think that your vehicle is not insured and revoke your vehicle registration. Now if you live in state A but register and insure your vehicle in state B then you run the risk of not adhereing to the law that says you must register the vehicle in the state of your primary residence. If you have a legitimate reason for doing this such as a second residence in another state at which you keep a vehicle then you should have no problem doing this. If you are doing it to avoid higher taxes or insurance premiums then you will be doing something illegal.
Most states will allow anyone to drive with a "foreign" (another state or country's) license for up to 30 days. After that, the state considers you a resident and requires you to get a drivers license for that state, as well to register and insure any vehicle you may own and are operating in that state.
No. Your insurance carrier needs to know where you are driving the vehicle most. It is called insurance fraud to live in one state, but have coverage somewhere else. Now if your insurance company is located in another state, but they know where you are and have your address updated, then it is okay.