No. The Insurance Policy must reflect the garaging address in the very State in which the vehicle is licensed for road use. However, once insured in one State, for example, Arkansas, the vehicle is covered to drive any where in the United States of America. There are certain companies that will allow drivers to be listed on policies with out of State Drivers License.
A general rule of thumb is to insure your car in the state it is registered in.
You start by....Call and ask your agent
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.....
You will insure the cars based on where they are driven the most. If you drive more in one state, insure the car there.
The car needs to be registered in the state the owner resides in.
No. You can only insure a vehicle that you own. The only situation where this is different is a married couple.
ABSOLUTLY NOT, UNLESS YOU ARE STORING IT BUT NOT FOR DRIVING PURPOSES
This depends on a few factors. If it is sitting on a public road then it must be insured. Some states will not allow you to have a vehicle on your property that is not registered, and to be registered it must be insured so check your state laws.
Yes.
Depends on the state
In order to insure a car you must have a vaild drivers license for the state you are insuring your car in.
You can insure a car for it's value or any amount you want. It does not have to be registered. If you are storing a car in a garage for a long period of time, it is a good idea to insure it against and damage.