The buyer pays a deposit or partial amount at signing with the remainder due at a specified later date. The bill of sale must clearly define the payment schedule and conditions for title release. Tailored for Queens County, New York. Fill in details, sign digitally, download a printable PDF in minutes.
Queens County clerk office and recording fees
Queens County Clerk is the office of record for moped title transfers and bill-of-sale filings in Queens County, New York. Buyers and sellers who complete a partial payment moped sale typically present the signed bill of sale, the assigned title, and a completed title application at this office. Recording fees vary by document type and page count, and the office accepts in-person walk-ins as well as mailed submissions for most filings.
Direct access: Queens County Clerk homepage. Online records search is not published by this office, so buyers should request a title status check at the counter when filing.
Filing deadline: New York requires the buyer to complete title transfer within 10 days of the sale date. Late filings at Queens County Clerk typically incur penalty fees and may delay registration.
New York lien-release procedure for liened moped sales
If the moped carries an active lien, the seller cannot transfer clean title to the buyer until the lien is released. New York handles this through a documented sequence that the lienholder, seller, and buyer must complete in order. Skipping a step often means the new title is issued with the lien still noted, blocking resale.
- Obtain MV-190 from the DMV or lienholder.
- Lienholder or authorized dealer completes MV-190.
- Submit MV-190 with current title and MV-82 at a NY DMV office.
- Pay title fee ($50 for first issuance).
- Receive clean title within 2–3 weeks.
Form reference: MV-190 is the New York document used to clear a lien on a moped title before a Queens County partial payment transfer can be recorded.
Moped recall categories to verify before a Queens County partial payment transfer
Open safety recalls follow the vehicle, not the owner — if the moped has an unrepaired recall when the partial payment sale closes, the Queens County buyer inherits the obligation to bring it to a dealer for the free fix. The NHTSA recall database flags the following categories most frequently for moped models:
- Fuel System
- Electrical
- Brakes
- Throttle
- Steering
On average a moped model has 1.1 recalls — buyers in Queens County should run a NHTSA recall check before signing. Enter the VIN at nhtsa.gov/recalls to pull the live status. Document any open recalls in the bill of sale so the buyer cannot later claim the seller concealed a known defect — a clean disclosure protects both parties under New York consumer-protection law.
Informational purposes only. This content is provided for informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Laws vary by state and individual circumstances differ. Consult a licensed attorney for jurisdiction-specific guidance on vehicle transfers, title requirements, or related legal matters.