BillOfSaleNow

Carnegie, South Carolina

Carnegie, South Carolina Electric Vehicle Bill of Sale for Business saleDownload a Signed PDF

Download a ready-to-sign PDF bill of sale for your electric vehicle business sale in Carnegie, South Carolina. Complete the form online and save the signed document instantly.

What’s Included in Your PDF

Your electric vehicle bill of sale PDF for South Carolina includes every field required by state law:

  • Full legal names and addresses of both parties
  • Vehicle identification number (VIN) and title number
  • Year, make, model, and body style
  • Odometer disclosure with federal compliance statement
  • Sale price and payment terms
  • As-is or warranty status declaration
  • Signature lines with printed name and date
  • South Carolina notarization block (if required)

PDF Format Details

US Letter (8.5 × 11 in) • 300 DPI print-ready • Flattened form fields • ~200 KB file size • Opens in any PDF reader

Business sale — What You Need to Know

A business entity (LLC, corporation, partnership) is either the buyer or seller. The transaction requires proof of authority for the individual signing on behalf of the entity.

Seller guidance

If the business is selling, ensure the person signing the bill of sale has authority under the business's operating agreement, bylaws, or a board resolution. The title should be in the business's legal name. Provide the buyer with documentation of signatory authority (e.g., a certificate of incumbency or corporate resolution).

Buyer guidance

If buying on behalf of a business, confirm your authority to purchase in the business's organizational documents. The title should be issued in the business's legal name, and your EIN will be needed for the registration. If purchasing a vehicle from a business, verify the seller's representative has authority and that any prior UCC or tax liens on the vehicle are released.

Legal note

Contracts signed by an unauthorized representative of a business entity may be voidable under agency law and state corporation/LLC statutes. A business seller must ensure no UCC lien (Article 9 fixture filing) or federal/state tax lien is attached to the vehicle. Business vehicle sales may trigger additional tax reporting obligations (Form 4797 for depreciated business assets, potential sales tax on the entity's basis).

Business sale checklist

  • Confirm the signatory has authority (operating agreement, board resolution, or power of attorney)
  • Verify the title is in the exact legal name of the business entity
  • Run a UCC and tax lien search on the business seller
  • Obtain an EIN for title registration if buying on behalf of an entity
  • Consult a tax advisor regarding depreciation recapture and Form 4797 implications

Electric Vehicle Safety & Recall Information

Data sourced from NHTSA safety ratings and recall databases

Average Safety Rating

4.6 / 5

Avg. Price Range

$12,000–$60,000

Odometer Disclosure

Required

Safety checkpoints for electric vehicle buyers

  • Check battery State of Health (SOH) — capacity degradation below 70% significantly reduces value
  • Verify full charge range matches manufacturer specifications for the model year
  • Test DC fast charging capability — some older EVs have degraded charge acceptance
  • Check for any battery recall or warranty coverage status
  • Confirm orange high-voltage cabling is intact and shielding is undamaged
  • Verify regenerative braking smoothness and one-pedal-driving function
  • Test pedestrian-warning sound (federally required at low speed)
  • Inspect for prior collision-repair history that touched the battery pack tray

Common recall categories

Battery/High VoltageSoftware/OTA UpdatesCharging SystemBrakesElectrical

On average, each electric vehicle model has approximately 2.8 recalls. Always check your specific vehicle at NHTSA.gov/recalls before completing a sale.

South Carolina Tax & Fee Summary

State Sales Tax Rate

5%

Title Transfer Fee

$15

Private Party Exempt

No

5% Infrastructure Maintenance Fee (IMF), capped at $500

IMF applies to all vehicle sales, capped at $500 max

Visit the official South Carolina DMV website

Carnegie Business sale electric vehicle pdf — when to file

South Carolina requires title transfer within 45 days of the sale date on the bill of sale. For business sale transactions specifically, file at South Carolina DMV – Carnegie (Visit https://www.scdmvonline.com to find the nearest Carnegie office) during normal hours: Mon–Fri 8:00 AM–5:00 PM (verify hours with local office). Miss the 45-day window and South Carolina 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 Carnegie bill of sale, your government-issued ID, and payment for the $15.00 title transfer fee plus 5% sales tax on the purchase price.

PDF reminder. Whether you keep your pdf as a signed digital PDF, both buyer and seller should leave the signing with an identical executed copy. The buyer needs the original to present at South Carolina DMV – Carnegie; the seller keeps a duplicate to prove the date of transfer if a future liability question arises before the title fully retitles.

Frequently asked questions

What business sale documents do I need for a electric vehicle sale in Carnegie, South Carolina?

For a business sale electric vehicle transaction in Carnegie, you need: Confirm the signatory has authority (operating agreement, board resolution, or power of attorney); Verify the title is in the exact legal name of the business entity; Run a UCC and tax lien search on the business seller; Obtain an EIN for title registration if buying on behalf of an entity; Consult a tax advisor regarding depreciation recapture and Form 4797 implications.

What is the sales tax on a electric vehicle private sale in Carnegie, South Carolina?

The South Carolina state sales tax rate is 5%. 5% Infrastructure Maintenance Fee (IMF), capped at $500. IMF applies to all vehicle sales, capped at $500 max

Do I need to notarize a electric vehicle bill of sale in South Carolina?

Check with your local South Carolina DMV office for notarization requirements. Requirements can vary by county.

What are common recalls for a electric vehicle?

Common recall categories for electric vehicles include: Battery/High Voltage, Software/OTA Updates, Charging System, Brakes, Electrical. On average, each electric vehicle model has approximately 2.8 recalls. Always check your specific vehicle at NHTSA.gov before completing a sale.

Trusted by private vehicle sellers nationwide

45% faster sale

Vehicles whose listings include a history report spend ~45% less time on site before selling, and report-viewers are 5x more likely to become a lead.

Source: Experian / AutoCheck

$4,000 avg loss

NHTSA estimates 450,000+ vehicles per year are sold with rolled-back odometers — the average victim loses about $4,000 in downstream repair costs.

Source: NHTSA

17.5M private sales/yr

About 17.5 million private-party vehicle transactions happen in the U.S. each year — roughly 47% of the used market.

Source: Cox Automotive 2024

1 in 3 buyers

Roughly 1 in 3 used-car buyers say they suspect private sellers are hiding mechanical problems — documentation closes that trust gap.

Source: JW Surety Bonds (n=3,000)

$60–$85 mobile notary

Mobile notary visit minimums run $60–$85 — higher on weekends, plus per-mile travel fees. State-formatted documents skip the trip.

Source: Thumbtack / NNA