North Carolina Salvage Title Guide
Selling a Side by Side with a Salvage Title in North Carolina
Disclosure requirements, inspection laws, rebuilt title process, pricing impact, and the bill of sale you need.
North Carolina salvage and rebuilt title rules
North Carolina requires a DMV inspection of rebuilt salvage vehicles. After passing, a Rebuilt Salvage title is issued. The rebuilt brand stays on the title.
Disclosure requirement: NC requires written disclosure of prior salvage status. The rebuilt title brand is visible on the face of the title at transfer.
North Carolina DMV: https://www.ncdot.gov/dmv
Salvage title (unrebuilt)
- Declared a total loss by insurer
- Cannot be driven on public roads
- Cannot be registered until repaired
- Can be sold "as-is" to rebuilders/dealers
- Must disclose salvage status in bill of sale
Rebuilt salvage title
- Vehicle was repaired + passed state inspection
- Can be driven and registered
- Title permanently branded "Rebuilt"
- Sells for 15-30% below clean-title value
- Some insurers limit coverage to liability only
How to sell a salvage-title side by side in North Carolina
Know what you have — salvage or rebuilt
Check the face of the title. "Salvage" means the vehicle has not been inspected post-repair. "Rebuilt Salvage" or "Reconstructed" means it passed inspection and can be driven legally. The steps for selling each are different.
Price it accurately
Start with KBB or NADA clean-title private-party value for your year/trim, then apply a 20-40% discount for salvage brand or 15-30% for rebuilt brand. Document your repair receipts — buyers with full repair history discount less. Be honest: overpricing a salvage vehicle means no sale.
Disclose the salvage history in writing
Include in your listing and bill of sale: (1) "This vehicle has a North Carolina salvage/rebuilt title." (2) A description of the damage event (flood, collision, fire). (3) All known repairs and parts replaced. Concealing salvage history is fraud in every state.
Complete the bill of sale with salvage disclosure
The bill of sale must state the salvage or rebuilt brand, the VIN, sale price, odometer, and both parties' identification. Include an explicit "buyer acknowledges salvage/rebuilt title" clause. Both parties sign.
Sign the title and complete the transfer
Sign the back of the title. The buyer takes it to the North Carolina DMV (https://www.ncdot.gov/dmv) to register. The salvage or rebuilt brand will follow the title into the buyer's name permanently. North Carolina title fee: $52. File a release of liability the same day.
Frequently asked questions
Can you sell a side by side with a salvage title in North Carolina?
Yes — selling a salvage title side by side in North Carolina is legal, but you must disclose the salvage brand in writing and on the bill of sale. You cannot sell a salvage title vehicle as if it has a clean title. NC requires written disclosure of prior salvage status. The rebuilt title brand is visible on the face of the title at transfer.
What is the difference between a salvage title and a rebuilt title in North Carolina?
A salvage title means the vehicle was declared a total loss and has not been repaired to road-legal condition — it cannot be registered or driven on public roads. A rebuilt (or "revived salvage") title means the vehicle was repaired, passed a state inspection, and can be registered and driven. North Carolina requires a DMV inspection of rebuilt salvage vehicles. After passing, a Rebuilt Salvage title is issued. The rebuilt brand stays on the title.
How much does a salvage title reduce a side by side's value?
A salvage or rebuilt title typically reduces private-party value by 20-40% compared to a clean-title equivalent. Rebuilt title vehicles generally sell for 15-30% less. The actual discount depends on the severity of the original damage, the quality of repairs, and how well you document the repair history. Buyers cannot easily insure or finance salvage-branded vehicles, which limits the buyer pool significantly.
What must be on the bill of sale for a salvage title side by side in North Carolina?
The bill of sale must explicitly state that the vehicle carries a salvage or rebuilt salvage title. Include: the VIN, odometer, sale price, salvage declaration ("This vehicle bears a [salvage/rebuilt] title"), buyer's acknowledgment of the branded title, and both parties' signatures.
Do I need to do anything special to the title before selling a salvage vehicle?
For a straight salvage title (unrebuilt): sign the title and include the salvage disclosure — no inspection needed to transfer, but the buyer cannot drive or register it until it passes a state inspection. For a rebuilt title: the inspection was already completed and the title was re-issued with the "rebuilt" brand. Sign the rebuilt title normally and disclose the salvage history in the bill of sale.
Create your North Carolina salvage-title bill of sale
State-specific form with salvage disclosure language — instant PDF.
Generate North Carolina Side by Side Bill of Sale