BillOfSaleNow

Just Sold My Car in Pennsylvania — What’s Next? (2026)

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Reviewed against state DMV requirementsLast reviewed: May 20266 min readEditorial policy
You just sold a car in Pennsylvania. The sale is not legally complete until you file a release of liability with Pennsylvania DMV and the buyer titles the car within 20 days. Pennsylvania charges 6% sales/use tax at title transfer (buyer pays).

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Pennsylvania car sale facts

Titling agencyPennsylvania DMV
Title transfer deadline20 days from sale
Release of liabilityFile with Pennsylvania DMV within 5 days
Buyer’s sales / use tax6% (Sales tax applies to private party vehicle purchases)
Bill of sale notaryNot required
Title fee (buyer pays)$58
Car identifierVIN

Your Pennsylvania car post-sale checklist

  1. 1

    Keep your signed Pennsylvania bill of sale

    This is your proof that you sold the car on the sale date. If the buyer gets a ticket, is in an accident, or fails to transfer the title within 20 days from the sale date, the Pennsylvania bill of sale shields you from liability. Keep both your copy and a scan for at least 5 years.

  2. 2

    File a release of liability with Pennsylvania DMV

    Most Pennsylvania sellers file this online through Pennsylvania DMV within 5 days of the sale. Filing removes you from records as the registered owner so any post-sale tickets, tolls, or accidents become the buyer's responsibility, not yours. Pennsylvania requires the buyer to title the car within 20 days — your release filing protects you if the buyer misses that deadline.

  3. 3

    Cancel or transfer your auto insurance

    Contact your insurer the same day you hand over the keys. Pennsylvania does not require you to maintain insurance on a vehicle you no longer own, but you must not cancel before the sale is complete. If you are replacing the car with another, transfer the policy instead — many insurers offer a short grace period to bind coverage on the new vehicle.

  4. 4

    Remove your license plates

    In Pennsylvania, plates go with the seller — not with the car. Remove the plate(s) before the buyer drives or rides away. You can return them to Pennsylvania DMV or transfer them to your next vehicle.

  5. 5

    Verify the 20-day title transfer window

    Pennsylvania requires the buyer to retitle the car at Pennsylvania DMV within 20 days of the sale date. If you have not received confirmation that the title has been transferred by day 25, contact Pennsylvania DMV with your bill of sale and release-of-liability filing number to confirm the change of ownership.

  6. 6

    Confirm your Pennsylvania tax obligations (seller's side)

    Pennsylvania charges 6% sales/use tax on private-party car sales — the buyer pays this at Pennsylvania DMV when titling. Sales tax applies to private party vehicle purchases. Sellers generally do not owe Pennsylvania sales tax, but if the car sold for more than your original purchase price you may owe federal capital gains tax. Consult a tax advisor.

  7. 7

    Watch for liens or loan payoff confirmation

    If you had a loan on the car, confirm the lender received the buyer's payoff and has released the lien on the Pennsylvania title before you deliver the title. Pennsylvania uses MV-38L as the lien release form — your lender will file this with Pennsylvania DMV to clear the title record.

Pennsylvania lien release procedure

  1. Lienholder completes Form MV-38L (Lienholder's Release).
  2. Owner submits MV-38L with current title and MV-1 (Application for Certificate of Title) at a PennDOT-authorized center.
  3. Pay $58 title fee.
  4. Receive clean title by mail.

Frequently Asked Questions — Pennsylvania

How long do I have to file a release of liability in Pennsylvania?

Pennsylvania sellers should file a release of liability with Pennsylvania DMV within 5 days of the sale. Most Pennsylvania sellers can file this online directly through Pennsylvania DMV. Filing removes you from records as the registered owner so any post-sale tickets, tolls, or accidents fall on the buyer.

What is the Pennsylvania title transfer deadline for a car?

Pennsylvania requires the buyer to title the car within 20 days of the sale date. Missing the deadline can trigger late fees and back-dated registration penalties.

Do I owe Pennsylvania sales tax on the car I just sold?

Pennsylvania charges 6% sales/use tax on private-party car sales. Sales tax applies to private party vehicle purchases. The buyer typically pays this at Pennsylvania DMV when titling — sellers generally owe no Pennsylvania sales tax on the proceeds. You may owe federal capital gains if you sold for more than the original purchase price.

Does Pennsylvania require a notary on the car bill of sale?

No. Pennsylvania does not require notarization for a private car bill of sale. A signed bill of sale with both parties' full names, addresses, signatures, and the date is sufficient for Pennsylvania DMV.

How does the buyer register the car in Pennsylvania?

The buyer brings the signed bill of sale and endorsed title to Pennsylvania DMV, pays the title fee (~$58) plus 6% sales/use tax, and receives a new Pennsylvania title in their name. Transfer must be completed within 20 days of the sale date.

What if the buyer hasn't transferred the title yet?

In most states this is the buyer's responsibility, not yours. Filing a release of liability with your state DMV is the seller-side protection — it removes you from records as the registered owner so any post-sale tickets, accidents, or tolls fall on the buyer regardless of when the title is actually transferred.

Do I need to keep the bill of sale after the sale is complete?

Yes — keep your signed bill of sale for at least 5 years. If a parking ticket, toll, or accident occurs after the sale but before the buyer transfers the title, the bill of sale is your proof that the car was sold on the sale date. Store a scan and the original.

Used BillOfSaleNow for your sale?

Quick review helps other Pennsylvania sellers find a tool that protects them.

Source: Pennsylvania DMV · Last verified 2026-05-07

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