Odometer Disclosure Statement in Florida (2025)
When selling a vehicle in Florida, federal law requires the seller to disclose the odometer reading to the buyer. Here is everything you need to know — form, requirements, exemptions, and fraud penalties.
Florida — Odometer Disclosure at a Glance
- Official formHSMV 82993 (Odometer Disclosure Statement)
- Required forMost vehicle transfers
- Age exemptionVehicles 10+ model years old
- Weight exemptionVehicles over 16,000 lbs GVWR
- AgencyFlorida HSMV
Florida's HSMV 82993 is available at any county tax collector's office and online. It is required for all motor vehicle transfers unless the vehicle is exempt.
Federal Requirement: Truth in Mileage Act
The federal Truth in Mileage Act (49 U.S.C. § 32701) requires odometer disclosure for nearly all vehicle transfers in the United States. Florida also enforces its own odometer fraud statutes in addition to the federal law.
- •Applies to all states — no state is exempt from the federal requirement
- •Required for vehicles under 16,000 lbs GVWR and under 10 model years old
- •Covers private party sales AND dealer sales
- •Both buyer and seller must sign the disclosure
- •Penalties: civil damages of 3× actual damages or $10,000 per violation (whichever is greater)
How to Complete the Odometer Disclosure in Florida
- 1
Check if required
Required if the vehicle is less than 10 model years old and under 16,000 lbs GVWR. If exempt, write "EXEMPT" in the odometer field on the title.
- 2
Get the form
Use HSMV 82993 (Odometer Disclosure Statement). It may be printed on the back of your title or available at the Florida HSMV.
- 3
Record the odometer
Read the odometer at or near the time of transfer. Record the exact reading — do not round.
- 4
Check the accuracy certification
Select one: (1) Odometer reading reflects actual mileage, (2) Mileage exceeds mechanical limits, (3) Mileage is NOT actual (known discrepancy).
- 5
Both parties sign
Seller signs first, then buyer acknowledges. Both must date their signatures. Keep copies.
Odometer Fraud Penalties in Florida
Odometer fraud in Florida is a third-degree felony under § 319.35 F.S. Penalties include up to 5 years in prison and $5,000 in fines per violation.
FAQ — Odometer Disclosure in Florida
- Do I need an odometer disclosure for a private car sale in Florida?
- Yes. Federal law and Florida state law both require odometer disclosure for most private vehicle sales. The form is HSMV 82993 (Odometer Disclosure Statement).
- What if I don't know the exact mileage?
- If the odometer is broken or unreadable, check the "not actual mileage" box and note the issue in the disclosure. Never leave the odometer field blank — that is treated as a false certification.
- Is the odometer disclosure included in the bill of sale?
- The odometer reading should be in your bill of sale AND on the official disclosure form. The bill of sale alone does not satisfy the federal odometer disclosure requirement.
- What happens if I forget to complete odometer disclosure?
- The DMV may reject the title transfer. More seriously, an incomplete disclosure may expose the seller to civil liability if a buyer later claims they were misled about mileage.
Official Resource
HSMV 82993 (Odometer Disclosure Statement) →Need a Bill of Sale?
A complete Florida vehicle sale includes both an odometer disclosure and a signed bill of sale. Generate a free, state-specific bill of sale that includes the odometer reading field.
Florida Car Bill of Sale →