If you are "Uninsured", then you are "uninsured. You may or may not be an insured driver on the vehicle owners policy. Just because someone else has coverage for that vehicle does not automatically mean you are a covered driver.
The insured should contact the insurance company or the insurance agent to determine the status of an unscheduled driver. Some auto insurance policies will cover the occasional driver while other policies will not.
All drivers of a motor vehicle on public roads are required to carry proof of financial responsibility at all times.
If the car you are driving is insured then you are not driving without insurance.
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.
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.
In the US insurance has nothing to do with speeding. If your state has mandatory insurance, the fact that your car is insured is good enough but the officer may want to see proof of insurance. Here it is the vehicle that is insured, not the driver. In UK you should not let anyone drive your car on the public road without checking they are insured. You can be fined if you let them drive without insurance.
In the UK you must have insurance that covers you to drive the car in question.
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
This depends where you live. In some countries the car is insured itself and anyone can drive it, but in other countries a car owner is insured. In the countries where the owner is insured, you will not get insurance without a valid driving license as you are not allowed to drive the car anyways!
No- you need to give information about your car in order to get insurance on it. You could insure yourself so that you are insured no matter what car you drive, but most of the time not.
If you have insurance yourself you are insured to drive someones car. If you have an accident your insurance will cover it.
The car is insured not the driver however many policies have restrictions as to who may drive the insured vehicle.
The vehicle is insured not the individual. You can pay for and obtain the insurance in the name of the owner with you listed as an insured operator.
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.