Financed Purchase Bus Bill of Sale in Texas
A financed vehicle purchase involves a third-party lender (bank, credit union, or the seller) providing the funds for the buyer to purchase the vehicle. The lender holds a security interest (lien) in the vehicle until the loan is fully repaid.
Payment documentation requirements
When a bank or credit union finances the purchase, they typically pay the seller directly and the buyer repays the lender in installments. If the seller is providing financing (seller carry-back), a separate promissory note should document the loan terms, interest rate, payment schedule, and default provisions in addition to the bill of sale.
How financed purchase affects title transfer
In financed transactions, the title is issued with the lender's name noted as lienholder. The buyer receives a copy of the title but the lender typically holds the original until the loan is paid off. Once the loan is satisfied, the lender releases the lien and the buyer receives a clean title.
Legal requirements in Texas
Seller-provided financing is subject to the Truth in Lending Act (TILA, Regulation Z), which requires disclosure of the Annual Percentage Rate (APR), total finance charge, amount financed, and total payments. State usury laws may limit the maximum interest rate a private seller can charge. Dealer-provided financing is regulated at the state level and may involve additional disclosure requirements.
Key facts for financed purchase transactions
- Lienholder's name appears on title until loan is fully repaid
- Seller financing requires a promissory note in addition to the bill of sale
- Truth in Lending Act (TILA) disclosures required for seller financing
- Existing liens on the vehicle must be cleared before title transfers
- State usury laws cap the maximum interest rate in seller-financed deals
Texas Financed Vehicle Purchase Requirements
- Federal Truth in Lending Act (TILA/Regulation Z) applies to all financed transactions.
- Texas Finance Code Chapter 348 (Motor Vehicle Installment Sales) governs dealer-financed and lender-financed vehicle sales.
- The retail installment contract must disclose the cash price, down payment, finance charge, APR, and total of payments.
- Texas caps the maximum time-price differential (finance charge rate) for motor vehicle installment sales.
- Lienholders must be recorded on the Texas title — Form 130-U must list the lienholder name and address.
Texas forms and documents
- Form 130-U (Application for Texas Title)
- Retail Installment Contract (Chapter 348-compliant)
- TILA Disclosure Statement
Texas Finance Code Chapter 348 is enforced by the Texas Office of Consumer Credit Commissioner (OCCC). Violations — including failure to provide required disclosures or charging above the statutory rate — entitle the buyer to void the finance charge and recover attorney fees. The OCCC can also impose administrative penalties on the creditor.
Important notice
If the vehicle still has an existing lien from the seller's own loan, that lien must be paid off and released before clear title can be transferred to the buyer. Never complete a financed purchase without confirming the title is free of prior liens.