How to Sell a Car With a Lien in Texas
Payoff process, simultaneous close options, lien release timeline, and what to include on the bill of sale.
Allowed
Simultaneous Close
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Buyer Pays Lender
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Avg Lien Release
How the Lien Payoff Works in Texas
The seller obtains a payoff quote from the lender, uses the buyer's funds at closing to pay off the loan, and the lender releases the title (or ELT lien record) to the DMV within 10 business days.
Simultaneous Close in Texas
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 is available in Texas
Texas allows a simultaneous close where the buyer's payment is split — loan payoff goes to the lender and remaining equity goes to the seller. A licensed title company or dealership typically facilitates this.
Step-by-Step: Selling a Liened Vehicle in Texas
- 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
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
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
Arrange payoff funding
In Texas, a licensed dealer or title agent can split the buyer's payment — lender payoff plus your equity — at closing.
- 5
Pay the lender and confirm release
Pay off the loan in full. Get written confirmation. The lender must release the title within 10 business days for lien release after payoff.
- 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 Texas Department of Motor Vehicles.
Bill of Sale for a Liened Vehicle
A bill of sale is required for private party vehicle sales in Texas regardless of lien status. When there is an active lien, the bill of sale should include:
- ✓Vehicle VIN, year, make, model, odometer reading
- ✓Sale price and payment method
- ✓Seller statement: 'Vehicle subject to existing lien held by [Lender Name]'
- ✓Seller commitment: 'Seller agrees to pay off lien within [X] days and provide clean title'
- ✓Buyer acknowledgment that title delivery is pending lien release
- ✓Signatures of both buyer and seller with date
FAQ — Selling a Car With a Lien in Texas
- Can I sell a car with a lien in Texas?
- 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?
- Texas lenders generally allow third-party payoff. Texas lenders generally accept payoff from a third party (the buyer) as long as the correct account information and payoff amount are provided.
- How long until I get the title after payoff?
- 10 business days for lien release after payoff after the lender receives full payoff. If the lender is late, contact the Texas Department of Motor Vehicles.