BillOfSaleNow

Texas Travel Trailer Title

Texas Travel Trailer Lien Release

How to get the lien released, how long it takes, what documents you need, and how to sell a travel trailer with an active loan in Texas.

Texas title fee: $33Updated 2025

What is a lien release?

When you finance a travel trailer, the lender places a lien on the title — this gives them a legal claim on the vehicle until the loan is repaid. A lien release (sometimes called a satisfaction of lien or lien payoff release) is the document your lender issues after you pay off the balance in full. It legally removes the lender's claim from the title.

Without a lien release, the title is encumbered. In Texas (and every other state), a buyer cannot legally register a vehicle in their name when a lien is still recorded on the title. This means the lien must be cleared before — or simultaneously with — any private sale.

Under UCC Article 9, lenders are required to release a lien within a reasonable time after payoff — typically 10-30 days depending on the state. Failure to release is a civil violation.

Texas lien release process

Texas TxDMV processes lien releases electronically when lenders use the ELR system. Paper lien releases from lenders must be submitted with Form VTR-262 to your county tax office.

Official Texas DMV: https://www.txdmv.gov

How to get a lien release in Texas

1

Request a payoff quote from your lender

Call or log in to your lender's portal and request a 10-day payoff quote. This is the exact amount you must pay to satisfy the loan — it includes principal, any accrued interest through the payoff date, and any fees. Get it in writing.

2

Pay off the loan

Send the payoff amount via certified funds (cashier's check, wire transfer, or certified check). Personal checks may cause a hold on the title release. Confirm with your lender which payment method releases the title fastest.

3

Receive the lien release document

The lender will issue a lien release — either on the back of the title (if they hold a paper title) or as a separate letter on lender letterhead. Electronic lenders often participate in the Texas DMV's electronic lien and title (ELT) system, in which case the release is transmitted directly to the DMV.

4

Submit to the Texas DMV

Present the title with the completed lien release (or the separate lien release letter) to the Texas DMV or county motor vehicle office. Pay the title fee ($33). A new clean title will be issued in your name, showing no lienholder.

5

Sign the clean title over to the buyer

Once you have the clean title in hand, you can complete a private sale normally. Sign the back of the title, record the odometer, and issue a bill of sale. The buyer takes the clean title to their local DMV to register in their name.

Selling a travel trailer with an active lien in Texas

You do not need to pay off your loan before finding a buyer — but the lien must be cleared at the time of the sale. There are two common approaches:

  • Option A:Meet at the buyer's bank or credit union. The buyer issues a cashier's check to your lender for the payoff amount and a separate check to you for the equity (sale price minus payoff). Your lender processes the release and sends the clean title to you or directly to the buyer.
  • Option B:Use an escrow service. An escrow agent holds the buyer's full payment, pays your lender, waits for the lien release, and then releases the title to the buyer and the remaining equity to you. Recommended when the loan balance is large.

Never sign over a title while a lien is still recorded. The buyer could end up with a vehicle the lender has legal claim on.

Frequently asked questions

How long does a lien release take in Texas?

Texas TxDMV processes lien releases electronically when lenders use the ELR system. Paper lien releases from lenders must be submitted with Form VTR-262 to your county tax office. After the lender processes the payoff, allow an additional 3-5 business days for mail delivery of the clear title.

Can I sell my travel trailer in Texas if there is still a lien on it?

Yes, but you must satisfy the lien at or before closing. The most common approach: the buyer issues a check directly to your lender for the payoff amount, the lender releases the lien and sends the clean title, and you sign it over to the buyer. Some sellers use an escrow service when the payoff amount is large.

What documents do I need for a lien release in Texas?

You need: (1) the signed lien release letter from your lender on their letterhead, or the lien release panel on the back of the title completed by the lender; (2) the current title; (3) a completed title transfer application; and (4) the Texas title transfer fee ($33). See the Texas DMV at https://www.txdmv.gov for the current form list.

What is the difference between a lien release and a lien payoff letter?

A payoff letter states the exact amount owed to satisfy the loan — it is used before payment. A lien release is issued after payment, confirming the debt is cleared. Only the lien release allows title transfer. Keep both documents for your records.

What happens if my lender does not send the lien release?

Under UCC Article 9 and most state laws, a secured party must release a lien within 10-30 days of payoff. If your lender fails to release in time, send a written demand. If they still do not respond, contact your state's attorney general consumer protection office or the CFPB. Courts can order a lien release if a lender refuses.

Ready to transfer the title?

Create a Texas travel trailer bill of sale — odometer disclosure included.

Generate Texas Travel Trailer Bill of Sale

Lien release for other vehicles in Texas

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