Odometer Disclosure Statement in Texas (2025)
When selling a vehicle in Texas, 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.
Texas — Odometer Disclosure at a Glance
- Official formTxDMV Form VTR-346 (Odometer Disclosure Statement)
- Required forMost vehicle transfers
- Age exemptionVehicles 10+ model years old
- Weight exemptionVehicles over 16,000 lbs GVWR
- AgencyTexas DMV
Texas requires odometer disclosure on the back of the title for most transfers. For vehicles exempt from disclosure, the seller should still note "EXEMPT" in the odometer field.
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. Texas 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 Texas
- 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 TxDMV Form VTR-346 (Odometer Disclosure Statement). It may be printed on the back of your title or available at the Texas DMV.
- 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 Texas
Odometer fraud in Texas is a state jail felony under Transportation Code § 501.155. Civil penalties include $10,000 per violation plus actual damages.
FAQ — Odometer Disclosure in Texas
- Do I need an odometer disclosure for a private car sale in Texas?
- Yes. Federal law and Texas state law both require odometer disclosure for most private vehicle sales. The form is TxDMV Form VTR-346 (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
TxDMV Form VTR-346 (Odometer Disclosure Statement) →Need a Bill of Sale?
A complete Texas 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.
Texas Car Bill of Sale →