Just Sold My RV in Alaska — What’s Next? (2026)
Need Alaska bill of sale documentation?
If you haven’t generated a Alaska-compliant bill of sale yet, do it now — your proof-of-sale window closes the moment the buyer leaves.
Start My Alaska RV Bill of Sale →Alaska RV sale facts
| Titling agency | Alaska DMV ↗ |
| Title transfer deadline | 30 days from sale |
| Release of liability | File with Alaska DMV within 5 days |
| Buyer’s sales / use tax | Private-party exempt (No state sales tax; check local borough/city taxes) |
| Bill of sale notary | Not required |
| Title fee (buyer pays) | $15 |
| RV identifier | chassis VIN (and coach serial if applicable) |
Your Alaska RV post-sale checklist
- 1
Keep your signed Alaska bill of sale
This is your proof that you sold the RV on the sale date. If the buyer gets a ticket, is in an accident, or fails to transfer the title within 30 days from the sale date, the Alaska bill of sale shields you from liability. Keep both your copy and a scan for at least 5 years.
- 2
File a release of liability with Alaska DMV
Most Alaska sellers file this online through Alaska 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. Alaska requires the buyer to title the RV within 30 days — your release filing protects you if the buyer misses that deadline.
- 3
Cancel or transfer your RV insurance
Contact your insurer the same day you hand over the keys. Alaska 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 RV with another, transfer the policy instead — many insurers offer a short grace period to bind coverage on the new vehicle.
- 4
Remove your license plates
In Alaska, plates go with the seller — not with the RV. Remove the plate(s) before the buyer drives or rides away. You can return them to Alaska DMV or transfer them to your next vehicle.
- 5
Verify the 30-day title transfer window
Alaska requires the buyer to retitle the RV at Alaska DMV within 30 days of the sale date. If you have not received confirmation that the title has been transferred by day 35, contact Alaska DMV with your bill of sale and release-of-liability filing number to confirm the change of ownership.
- 6
Confirm your Alaska tax obligations (seller's side)
Alaska does not impose state sales tax on private-party RV sales (No state sales tax; check local borough/city taxes). The buyer typically pays a flat title fee (~$15) at Alaska DMV. If you sold the RV for more than your original purchase price, you may owe federal capital gains — most private RV sales are at a loss and not taxable.
- 7
Watch for liens or loan payoff confirmation
If you had a loan on the RV, confirm the lender received the buyer's payoff and has released the lien on the Alaska title before you deliver the title. Alaska uses Form 808 as the lien release form — your lender will file this with Alaska DMV to clear the title record.
RV-specific note
Motorhomes (Class A/B/C) title under the chassis VIN; towable RVs (5th-wheels, travel trailers) title separately from the tow vehicle and may use a trailer-specific title category. Confirm both VIN and coach serial are recorded on the bill of sale.
Alaska lien release procedure
- Obtain Form 808 from the Alaska DMV or the lienholder.
- Lienholder completes and signs Form 808 to release the lien.
- Submit Form 808 with the existing title and title application at an Alaska DMV office.
- Pay the title fee and receive a clean title.
Frequently Asked Questions — Alaska
How long do I have to file a release of liability in Alaska?▾
Alaska sellers should file a release of liability with Alaska DMV within 5 days of the sale. Most Alaska sellers can file this online directly through Alaska 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 Alaska title transfer deadline for an RV?▾
Alaska requires the buyer to title the RV within 30 days of the sale date. Missing the deadline can trigger late fees and back-dated registration penalties.
Do I owe Alaska sales tax on the RV I just sold?▾
Alaska does not impose state sales tax on private-party RV sales. No state sales tax; check local borough/city taxes. Sellers generally owe no Alaska sales tax. You may owe federal capital gains tax if the RV sold for more than your original purchase price — most private sales are at a loss and not taxable.
Does Alaska require a notary on the RV bill of sale?▾
No. Alaska does not require notarization for a private RV bill of sale. A signed bill of sale with both parties' full names, addresses, signatures, and the date is sufficient for Alaska DMV.
How does the buyer register the RV in Alaska?▾
The buyer brings the signed bill of sale and endorsed title to Alaska DMV, pays the title fee (~$15) plus any applicable use tax, and receives a new Alaska title in their name. Transfer must be completed within 30 days of the sale date.
Do I record the chassis VIN or the coach serial number on the bill of sale?▾
Both — the chassis VIN is the one that titles the motorhome (it is the VIN of the cab chassis built by Ford, Chevy, Mercedes-Benz, or Freightliner). The coach serial is built by the RV manufacturer (Winnebago, Thor, Forest River, etc.) and identifies the living-quarters build. Record both on the bill of sale so the buyer has a complete record. Towable RVs (5th-wheels, travel trailers) carry their own single VIN and title separately from the tow vehicle.
Do weight-class title fees apply when I sell my RV?▾
In several states (CA, TX, NY, PA, IL, OH, GA, MI, WA, OR) title fees scale with the RV's GVWR (Gross Vehicle Weight Rating). The buyer pays these fees at the DMV — sellers do not pay them. Make sure your bill of sale records the GVWR so the buyer can confirm the fee at title transfer.
Used BillOfSaleNow for your sale?
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Source: Alaska DMV ↗ · Last verified 2026-05-07