Cash Sale Heavy Equipment Bill of Sale in Florida
A cash sale is the simplest vehicle transaction: the buyer pays the full agreed price in cash (or equivalent), and the seller transfers title immediately. No financing, no liens, no waiting — title should change hands the moment payment is confirmed.
Payment documentation requirements
The bill of sale should state the exact cash amount paid and note that payment was received in full. If payment is made via cashier's check or money order rather than physical currency, note the instrument type and issuing bank on the document. Large cash transactions of $10,000 or more must be reported to the IRS by the receiving party using Form 8300, as required by the Bank Secrecy Act.
How cash sale affects title transfer
In a cash sale, title should transfer simultaneously with payment — a "concurrent closing." The seller should sign the back of the title over to the buyer only after confirming that funds are in hand. Do not accept personal checks as cash equivalents; a bounced check does not undo the title transfer in most states.
Legal requirements in Florida
Once the bill of sale is signed and cash payment is confirmed, the transaction is complete. The seller has no further obligation unless a specific warranty was provided in writing. The buyer should register the vehicle in their name within the state's required timeframe — typically 10 to 30 days — to avoid late registration fees.
Key facts for cash sale transactions
- Title transfers simultaneously with cash payment
- IRS Form 8300 required for cash transactions of $10,000 or more
- Cashier's check or money order recommended over personal checks
- Seller should sign title only after confirming payment received
- Buyer must register within state deadline (typically 10–30 days)
Florida Cash Vehicle Sale Requirements
- Federal IRS Form 8300 required for cash transactions of $10,000 or more.
- Florida imposes 6% state sales tax plus county discretionary surtax (up to 1.5%) on vehicle purchases.
- Title transfer must occur within 30 days of the cash sale.
- HSMV 82040 (Application for Certificate of Title) must be submitted to the county tax collector.
- Florida requires an odometer disclosure on the title for vehicles under 10 model years old.
Florida forms and documents
- IRS Form 8300 (if $10,000+ cash)
- HSMV 82040 (Application for Certificate of Title)
- HSMV 82994 (Secure Power of Attorney, if applicable)
Florida Statute Section 319.23 governs certificate of title requirements. Cash buyers must present the signed title, bill of sale, and proof of Florida insurance to the county tax collector to complete the transfer.