A Mecklenburg County, North Carolina dirt bike bill of sale records the private transfer of a dirt bike between buyer and seller in Mecklenburg County. As of 2026, North Carolina requires this document at the county clerk or DMV to complete title transfer.
Generate a legally compliant dirt bike bill of sale for Mecklenburg County, North Carolina. Fill in your details, sign digitally, and download a printable PDF — ready in under 3 minutes.
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North Carolina gives the buyer 28 days from the sale date on the Mecklenburg County bill of sale to file the dirt bike title transfer with the Mecklenburg County clerk. Miss the 28-day window and North Carolina charges a late penalty plus accrued use tax, and the seller can remain on the title for civil liability if the buyer crashes the vehicle before retitling.
If the dirt bike carries a lien, work through the North Carolina lien-release procedure (NC Title (lien release section)) before you file at the Mecklenburg County clerk:
- Lienholder completes the lien release section on the back of the existing NC title.
- Owner submits the released title and title application at a NC DMV license plate agency.
- Pay the title fee and receive a clean North Carolina title.
Dirt Bike pre-purchase inspection in Mecklenburg County
Before you sign the Mecklenburg County dirt bike bill of sale, walk through this inspection. A pre-purchase inspection by a Mecklenburg County mechanic costs $100-200 and routinely uncovers $1,000+ in deferred maintenance — that is the figure you negotiate off the price or walk away from entirely.
Common mechanical issues to inspect
- Verify engine hours via meter or pull top end to inspect piston/rings
- Check linkage bearings and swingarm bearings for grit and seizure
- Inspect frame welds at swingarm pivot, motor mounts, and steering head
- Test radiator condition — bent fins/leaking are common on race bikes
- Check fork oil for milky contamination indicating seal failure
- Inspect clutch basket for notching from aggressive shifting
Safety checkpoints
- Inspect frame and subframe for cracks from jumps and crashes
- Check fork seal condition and suspension linkage bearings
- Verify engine compression and listen for bottom-end noise
- Check sprocket and chain wear — high-wear items on dirt bikes
- Confirm spark arrestor is present and unmodified (USFS land requirement)
- Test kill switch function and bar-mounted controls
Title documentation notes. Dirt bikes are typically classified as off-highway motorcycles (OHV) and titled accordingly in states that issue OHV titles (California, Idaho, Texas, etc.), while other states transfer with bill-of-sale only and require only a green/red OHV decal. Street-legal conversion (dual-sport) requires a separate state inspection plus DOT-approved lighting, mirrors, and tires before retitling as a road-legal motorcycle. Federal odometer disclosure does not apply to off-road-only dirt bikes.