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Selling a Totaled Car in Texas

Your options for selling a totaled or salvage-title vehicle in Texas — what happens to the title, how to disclose it, and how much you can realistically get.

Texas Salvage Title Rules

Texas issues a Salvage Title when a vehicle is declared a total loss at 100% of its actual cash value, or when airbags deploy and cost exceeds 75% of value.

Your Selling Options

Junkyard / Scrap

$100–$1,500

Fastest. No title hassle. Low return. Best if car is not driveable.

Salvage Auction

$500–$5,000+

Copart or IAAI. Reaches national buyers. Requires transport. Best returns for popular vehicles.

Private Buyer

$1,000–$8,000+

Allowed in Texas with full disclosure. Highest potential return but requires more effort.

Step-by-Step Process

  1. 1

    Get the insurance settlement decision

    Your insurer will declare total loss when repair costs exceed a threshold (typically 75–80% of ACV). You have two options: (1) accept full ACV and surrender the vehicle, or (2) retain the vehicle, accept reduced ACV, and receive a Salvage Title.

  2. 2

    Decide whether to retain or surrender

    If you retain the vehicle, the insurer deducts salvage value from your ACV payment. In Texas, if you retain a total loss vehicle, the insurer pays you the ACV minus the vehicle's salvage value. You receive a Salvage Title from TxDMV. Retaining makes sense if you can rebuild and sell for a profit, or sell parts.

  3. 3

    Obtain the Salvage Title

    If retaining: Texas issues a Salvage Title when a vehicle is declared a total loss at 100% of its actual cash value, or when airbags deploy and cost exceeds 75% of value. The $33 title fee applies to transfer.

  4. 4

    Choose your selling method

    Junkyard/scrap: fastest, lowest price ($100–$1,500 depending on vehicle). Private buyer: higher return but requires disclosure. Texas allows private sale of salvage title vehicles. The seller must disclose the salvage designation prominently on the bill of sale.

  5. 5

    Complete the title transfer

    Sign the Salvage Title over to the buyer. Include a bill of sale documenting the salvage status, sale price, and both party signatures. Texas distinguishes between Salvage (totaled vehicle) and Non-Repairable Titles (stripped or crushed-only vehicles). A Non-Repairable Title vehicle cannot be re-titled for road use — ever.

Disclosure Is Required — and Criminal to Omit

Every sale of a salvage title vehicle in Texas requires clear disclosure on both the title assignment and the bill of sale. Failure to disclose is fraud and can result in civil damages plus criminal prosecution.

Texas Note

Texas distinguishes between Salvage (totaled vehicle) and Non-Repairable Titles (stripped or crushed-only vehicles). A Non-Repairable Title vehicle cannot be re-titled for road use — ever.

Frequently Asked Questions

What happens to the title when a car is totaled in Texas?
When a vehicle is declared a total loss in Texas, Texas issues a Salvage Title when a vehicle is declared a total loss at 100% of its actual cash value, or when airbags deploy and cost exceeds 75% of value. The Salvage brand remains on the title permanently — there is no way to remove it, even after full repair.
Can I sell a totaled car to a private buyer in Texas?
Yes. Texas allows private sale of salvage title vehicles. The seller must disclose the salvage designation prominently on the bill of sale. Always disclose the salvage title status prominently on the bill of sale.
Should I keep my totaled car or let the insurance company take it?
Keep it if: (1) the repair cost is significantly less than what the insurer estimates, (2) you have a buyer lined up for parts or the whole car, or (3) you can rebuild it yourself and sell as a rebuilt title. Let the insurer take it if: you want a clean settlement, you do not want to deal with the salvage process, or the vehicle is not worth repairing.
How much can I sell a totaled car for?
Salvage value is typically 10–25% of the vehicle's pre-accident ACV. Factors: vehicle age, make/model, extent of damage, and local scrap metal prices. A $20,000 car might sell as salvage for $1,500–$5,000. Auction sites like Copart or IAAI often get higher prices than local junkyards.
Do I need a bill of sale to sell a totaled car?
Yes. A bill of sale protects you by documenting the sale date, price, and that the buyer accepted the vehicle in its current salvage condition. Include explicit language such as "SOLD WITH SALVAGE TITLE — VEHICLE IS NOT ROAD LEGAL WITHOUT ADDITIONAL STATE INSPECTION."
What if I sell a totaled car without disclosing the salvage title in Texas?
Failure to disclose a salvage title is fraud in Texas and can result in civil liability for the difference in value, plus potential criminal charges. Always disclose the title brand clearly on both the title assignment and the bill of sale.

Generate a Salvage Disclosure Bill of Sale

Protect yourself with a signed bill of sale that documents the salvage title status, sale price, and as-is condition.

Generate Texas Bill of Sale

Trusted by private vehicle sellers nationwide

45% faster sale

Vehicles whose listings include a history report spend ~45% less time on site before selling, and report-viewers are 5x more likely to become a lead.

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.

Source: Cox Automotive 2024

1 in 3 buyers

Roughly 1 in 3 used-car buyers say they suspect private sellers are hiding mechanical problems — documentation closes that trust gap.

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

$60–$85 mobile notary

Mobile notary visit minimums run $60–$85 — higher on weekends, plus per-mile travel fees. State-formatted documents skip the trip.

Source: Thumbtack / NNA