You may need insurance on a registered vehicle even when you do not hold a valid license—common when a family member drives or during reinstatement. Cali-Fast explains disclosure rules and carrier options.
Carriers require accurate information about who owns and who drives the vehicle. Misrepresenting a primary driver is fraud and can deny claims.
Some insurers allow a licensed driver as primary while unlicensed owner remains on title—rules vary.
Registration and insurance are linked in California; operating without both creates DMV and legal risk.
Cali-Fast Insurance is headquartered in Cerritos and assists clients throughout California by phone and online quote tools.
Whether you are in a major metro or a smaller city, the same licensed team handles auto, SR-22, title bonds, and business lines.
Once licensed, update policy promptly—rates may change with new driver status.
Traffic school and reinstatement steps still apply independently of insurance.
Many drivers with no license still have options. Situations where a vehicle needs coverage even though the named driver does not hold a valid license. Cali-Fast reviews your details and shops appropriate markets.
Not always. Underwriting varies by carrier. We present alternatives instead of stopping at the first decline.
Yes. Cali-Fast supports California drivers statewide with phone and online quote options.
Driver license status, vehicle details, garaging address, and a brief claims or violation history help us quote accurately on the first pass.
Absolutely. Call (855) 203-2282 to talk with a licensed California insurance team member.
Lapses often increase rates and can trigger DMV holds. Contact us before driving uninsured—we shop non-standard markets when needed and explain reinstatement steps.
Yes. SR-22 filings and title bond guidance are core services. We explain filing timelines and keep coverage continuous to avoid DMV setbacks.
Policies issued or renewed on or after January 1, 2025 must meet 30/60/15 minimums under SB 1107—$30,000 bodily injury per person, $60,000 per accident, and $15,000 property damage. Limits are scheduled to increase again in 2035.
Talk to a real agent today — fast quotes, straight answers. Get a free quote with no credit card required.
California agency license number on file — request in writing for full disclosure.
