No. See the related link for more detail on this
You need to be a legal resident of Florida and switch your Illinois licence over to Florida before you can be eligible to be issued a CDL in Florida.
For private use, no state requires a CDL for an RV.
If it's a registered farm vehicle, then a CDL is not required, provided that:It is operated exclusively for farm useIt is not operated on a for-hire basisIt is operated within a 150 mile radius of the farmIt is operated by the farmer, members of the farmer's immediate family, or direct employees of the farmer
If the gross vehicle weight rating of the truck is 26,001 pounds or more, you need a CDL to operate it on the public highways. Since it's not a combination vehicle, a Class B CDL will do fine. Additionally, farm licence plates are only valid when operated by the farmer who registered the vehicle under those plates, their immediate family, or employees of that farmer, and only within a 150 mile radius of their farm. Not only would it be illegal for you to operate that vehicle without a CDL, but your use of a farm licence plate to transport it more than 150 miles from that farm (as well as not being a family member or employee of that farmer) is highly illegal.
Depends. If it is a registered farm vehicle, you are a direct (W2) employee of that farmer (or an immediate family member of the farmer), and you're operating that vehicle solely within a 150 mile radius of that farm, then a CDL is not required - registered farm vehicles are regulated by the state, rather than the FMCSA. The state may require an upgraded non-CDL license - you'll have to inquire with the Indiana DMV about this.
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Situation dependent. If the vehicle is a registered farm vehicle of a type which would normally require a CDL, a CDL is not required so long as:The vehicle is used solely for the purposes of that farm, and is not hired out on a third party basis (which is illegal to do with farm tags, anyhow). It can, however, be used for the delivery of good produced by that farmer (e.g., I've worked in the past for a sod farmer who delivered sod in a registered farm truck, and it was perfectly legal).The vehicle remains within a 150 mile radius (air radius) of the farm it belongs to... anything beyond that will require a CDL.The vehicle is operated by the farmer, immediate family members of the farmer, or a direct employee of the farmer. A direct employee is a W2 employee... if you're on a 1099, you're not a direct employee, and would need a CDL.The vehicle is registered as a farm vehicle.If it doesn't meet ALL of these requirements, you'll need a CDL.
Generally 2 prior DUIs mean a permanent revocation of a driver’s CDL.
Yes, you will need insurance to drive with a CDL license.
If you are an established resident of Florida, yes. If not, then no.
No, you don't. It transfers right over.
Your CDL IS your license. If your CDL gets yanked, you don't retain a regular drivers license - you're revoked, period.