You need to be able to draw 7 red lines, all strictly perpendicular, two with green ink, and two transparent, on a 2D plane, to be considered an expert. Maybe even inflate a baloon in shape of a kitten (watch the video).
On a serious note, you don't have to be an expert to post an answer on Stack Overflow. However, people with 100K+ reputation tend to score higher, because their answers are usually of higher quality. This includes more professional wording, no repetition, straight to the point, and more technical details. Same applies for people with different professional experience. You do more of the same thing, you start doing it better, and with ease.
My definition of expert is being a person who knows multiple ways of solving the problem, and also how to move along, as requirements are changed/clarified. They can propose the best solution, having in scope such factors as money and time spent. Many businesses are looking for such people, even though it costs them a fortune.
People who ask questions on Stack Overflow are usually not businesses and they often don't need or can understand such a complex answer. Most of the time it's some simple answer to work for their small needs. Based on my experience on Stack Overflow, your highest gain of reputation is from being the first one to answer such small questions. You don't need a lot of experience to answer in this case.
However, the quality of your English matters, so practice your communication skills, googling and fast typing - and welcome to the circle of Stack Overflow experts. :)