How a Dealer Sale Travel Trailer Sale Works in New York
A dealer sale involves a licensed vehicle dealer selling to a private buyer. Dealers are regulated at both the federal and state level and must comply with requirements that do not apply to private party sales.
Seller responsibilities
Licensed dealers are required by the FTC Used Car Rule (16 CFR Part 455) to display a Buyers Guide sticker on every used vehicle offered for sale. This sticker discloses whether the vehicle is sold "as-is" or with a warranty, and what systems are covered. Dealers must also collect and remit applicable state sales tax on the transaction.
What buyers need to know
Buyers purchasing from a licensed dealer may have access to state lemon law protections, depending on whether the dealer offered a warranty. The implied warranty of merchantability under UCC applies unless the dealer specifically disclaims it in the Buyers Guide. Request a copy of the Buyers Guide, any warranty documentation, and vehicle inspection reports.
Legal requirements in New York
Dealer-generated bills of sale often include additional disclosures beyond a private party document. The document must identify the dealer's license number in most states. Financing through the dealer triggers Truth in Lending Act (TILA) disclosure requirements, including APR, total finance charge, and payment schedule.
Key facts for dealer sale transactions
- FTC Used Car Rule requires Buyers Guide on every used vehicle
- Dealer must collect and remit applicable state sales tax
- Lemon law protections may apply if dealer provided a warranty
- Implied warranty of merchantability applies unless disclaimed in writing
- Dealer license number must appear on the bill of sale in most states
New York Dealer Licensing Requirements
- Dealers must hold a valid Dealer Registration Certificate issued by the New York State DMV.
- New York requires dealers to post a $20,000 surety bond (increased from $10,000 for certain dealer classes).
- All used vehicle sales by dealers must include a Used Car Lemon Law notice for vehicles with 18,000 miles or fewer and within two years of original delivery.
- Dealers must provide buyers with a completed NYS DMV MV-50 (Retail Certificate of Sale) for every transaction.
- New York City dealers must also comply with NYC Department of Consumer and Worker Protection (DCWP) licensing requirements.
New York forms and documents
- MV-50 (Retail Certificate of Sale)
- MV-82 (Vehicle Registration/Title Application)
- DTF-802 (Statement of Transaction)
New York Vehicle and Traffic Law Article 16 governs dealer licensing. The New York Used Car Lemon Law (General Business Law Section 198-b) provides warranty coverage for qualifying vehicles purchased from dealers — coverage ranges from 90 days/4,000 miles to 180 days/6,000 miles depending on mileage at time of sale.