Lease buyout — What You Need to Know
The lessee purchases the leased vehicle at the end of or during a lease term. The leasing company (lessor) transfers the title to the buyer and a bill of sale documents the purchase price, residual value, and payoff terms.
Seller guidance
As the lessor (leasing company or financial institution), you must provide a clean title or title assignment once the buyout is complete and all fees are settled. The buyout price is typically the residual value stated in the lease agreement plus applicable purchase fees and sales tax. Provide the lessee a written purchase agreement or bill of sale confirming the purchase price, odometer reading, and VIN.
Buyer guidance
Your lease agreement states the residual value — the guaranteed buyout price. Compare this to current market value (Kelley Blue Book, Edmunds) before proceeding. You will owe sales tax on the purchase price at time of registration. Check whether your state allows you to take the title directly or whether it must route through a dealer. Some states (e.g., Texas) require lease buyouts to go through a licensed dealer.
Legal note
Lease buyouts are governed by the original lease agreement and applicable state motor vehicle laws. The Consumer Leasing Act (15 U.S.C. § 1667) and Federal Reserve Regulation M (12 CFR Part 213) require lessors to disclose buyout rights and residual values at lease origination. Some states impose dealer-only rules on buyout transactions (TX Transportation Code § 503.001). Sales tax applies in most states on the full purchase price or residual value.
Lease buyout checklist
- Obtain the payoff/residual amount in writing from the leasing company
- Compare residual value to current fair market value before committing
- Confirm whether your state requires the buyout to be completed through a dealer
- Arrange financing or cash payoff — confirm payoff wire instructions with lessor
- Receive clean title assignment and bill of sale from the leasing company
- Register the vehicle and pay applicable sales tax within your state deadline
SUV Safety & Recall Information
Data sourced from NHTSA safety ratings and recall databases
Average Safety Rating
4.3 / 5
Avg. Price Range
$8,000–$45,000
Odometer Disclosure
Required
Safety checkpoints for suv buyers
- Verify AWD/4WD system operation — transfer case and differential fluid should be serviced per schedule
- Check for Takata airbag recall status (SUVs were heavily affected)
- Inspect suspension components for wear — SUVs carry more weight than sedans
- Test third-row seating mechanisms and latches if equipped
- Verify roof-rack mounting points and crossbar attachment integrity
- Confirm tire-pressure monitoring system warns correctly
- Test rollover sensor function (lift-gate test where applicable)
- Inspect side curtain airbag deployment paths are unobstructed
Common recall categories
AirbagsPower TrainElectricalFuel SystemBrakes
On average, each suv model has approximately 3.4 recalls. Always check your specific vehicle at NHTSA.gov/recalls before completing a sale.
NHTSA recall watch for Greeley suv buyers
Before signing your lease buyout bill of sale in Greeley, run a NHTSA recall check on the specific year and model. Recent-model suvs with the most open recalls:
| Model + year | NHTSA recalls | Top categories |
|---|
| 2020 Ford Explorer | 31 | Back Over Prevention, Power Train, Seat Belts |
| 2021 Ford Explorer | 24 | Back Over Prevention, Power Train, Engine |
| 2022 Ford Explorer | 23 | Back Over Prevention, Power Train, Fuel System |
| 2020 Ford Escape | 23 | Electrical System, Power Train, Back Over Prevention |
| 2022 Ford Bronco | 20 | Back Over Prevention, Power Train, Equipment |
Run a NHTSA VIN lookup at nhtsa.gov/recalls before purchase — open recalls are the seller’s responsibility to disclose under federal law, and unresolved campaigns are a routine negotiating point on the lease buyout sale price.
Greeley Lease buyout suv generator — when to file
Puerto Rico requires title transfer within 30 days of the sale date on the bill of sale. For lease buyout transactions specifically, file at Puerto Rico DMV (See the Puerto Rico DMV website for office locations in Greeley) during normal hours: Mon–Fri 8:00 AM–5:00 PM (hours vary by location). Miss the 30-day window and Puerto Rico typically charges a late-transfer penalty plus accrued use tax, and the seller can remain on the title for civil liability until the buyer completes retitling. Bring the signed title, the completed Greeley bill of sale, your government-issued ID, and payment for the Varies title transfer fee plus Varies sales tax on the purchase price.
Generator reminder. Whether you keep your generator as a generator-produced document, both buyer and seller should leave the signing with an identical executed copy. The buyer needs the original to present at Puerto Rico DMV; the seller keeps a duplicate to prove the date of transfer if a future liability question arises before the title fully retitles.