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How to Sell a Car With a Lien in Nebraska

Payoff process, simultaneous close options, lien release timeline, and what to include on the bill of sale.

Limited

Simultaneous Close

Confirm First

Buyer Pays Lender

10–15

Avg Lien Release

How the Lien Payoff Works in Nebraska

The seller obtains a payoff quote from the lender, the buyer's funds are used to pay off the loan at or before closing, and the lender releases the title (or ELT lien) within the state-mandated timeframe.

Title holder note: Your lender holds the title while the lien is active. After payoff, the lender releases the title — either a physical paper title or an electronic release depending on your state.

Simultaneous Close in Nebraska

A simultaneous close lets you use the buyer's payment to pay off the lender in the same transaction — you never need to come out of pocket.

Simultaneous close has limitations in Nebraska

A simultaneous close (using the buyer's funds to pay off the lender at closing) may be available through a licensed dealer or title agent in your state. Contact your state DMV for guidance.

Step-by-Step: Selling a Liened Vehicle in Nebraska

  1. 1

    Get a payoff quote

    Request a payoff quote from your lender valid through your expected closing date. Ask for a 10-day payoff to give yourself a buffer.

  2. 2

    Calculate your equity

    Sale price minus payoff amount equals your equity (or deficit). If you owe more than the car is worth, you must cover the difference.

  3. 3

    Disclose the lien to the buyer

    Tell the buyer there is an active lien. Add a disclosure line to the bill of sale: 'Title subject to lien release — to be delivered within [X] days of payoff.'

  4. 4

    Arrange payoff funding

    In Nebraska, most sellers pay off the loan first, then complete the sale once the clean title is in hand.

  5. 5

    Pay the lender and confirm release

    Pay off the loan in full. Get written confirmation. The lender must release the title within 10–15 business days (varies by lender and state).

  6. 6

    Sign over the clean title

    Once the clean title is available, sign it over to the buyer and complete the bill of sale. The buyer registers the vehicle with the Your State DMV.

Never transfer a title without releasing the lien. Signing over a title with an unsatisfied lien — without the buyer's knowledge — is fraud. The buyer cannot register the vehicle, and you remain liable for the loan.
Nebraska note: Always get a written payoff quote valid through your closing date. Payoff amounts change daily as interest accrues.

Bill of Sale for a Liened Vehicle

A bill of sale is required for private party vehicle sales in Nebraska regardless of lien status. When there is an active lien, the bill of sale should include:

FAQ — Selling a Car With a Lien in Nebraska

Can I sell a car with a lien in Nebraska?
Yes — but the lien must be paid off before or simultaneously with the title transfer. The buyer cannot register the vehicle until the title is clear.
What if I owe more than the car is worth?
You must cover the shortfall at closing. The lender will not release the title for less than the full payoff amount. Options: negotiate a short payoff (rare), use personal funds to cover the gap, or wait until the loan balance drops below the market value.
Can the buyer pay off my loan directly?
Confirm with your lender — many Nebraska lenders prefer payoff from the borrower. Confirm with your lender whether the buyer can pay off the loan directly. Some lenders require payoff from the borrower (seller) only.
How long until I get the title after payoff?
10–15 business days (varies by lender and state) after the lender receives full payoff. If the lender is late, contact the Your State DMV.

Official Resource

Your State DMV

Other States

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Source: Experian / AutoCheck

$4,000 avg loss

NHTSA estimates 450,000+ vehicles per year are sold with rolled-back odometers — the average victim loses about $4,000 in downstream repair costs.

Source: NHTSA

17.5M private sales/yr

About 17.5 million private-party vehicle transactions happen in the U.S. each year — roughly 47% of the used market.

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1 in 3 buyers

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Source: JW Surety Bonds (n=3,000)

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