BillOfSaleNow

California vs Florida: Truck Bill of Sale Comparison (2026)

BN
Reviewed against state DMV requirementsLast reviewed: May 20266 min readEditorial policy
Comparing a private-party truck sale in California vs Florida. Each row pulls the published rule from the state DMV: form number, sales tax, title fee, transfer deadline, notarization, lien release, odometer disclosure, VIN inspection, and titling agency. The buyer files the title transfer in the state where they will register the truck — match the bill of sale to that state.

Side-by-side: California vs Florida truck sale

FeatureCaliforniaFlorida
Official bill of sale formREG 135 — Bill of SaleHSMV 82050 — Motor Vehicle, Mobile Home, or Vessel Bill of Sale
Sales / use tax rate7.25% sales/use tax · California procedure6% sales/use tax · Florida procedure
Title fee (buyer pays)$23$75
Title transfer deadline10 days from sale30 days from sale
Notarization requirementNot requiredNot required
Lien release processREG 227HSMV 82260
Odometer disclosure cutoffRequired for trucks newer than 2011Required for trucks newer than 2011
VIN inspection (out-of-state)Required (out-of-state vehicles)Required (out-of-state vehicles)
Titling agencyCalifornia DMVFLHSMV

When to choose California vs Florida

Florida charges 6% vs 7.25% in California, a 1.25-point spread the buyer pays at title transfer. California requires title transfer within 10 days; Florida allows 30. Tight 10-day deadlines push back-dated late fees onto buyers who delay. Both states publish official bill of sale forms (California: REG 135, Florida: HSMV 82050), so the form itself is a non-issue — what matters is which one your titling agency accepts and how the odometer block reads. For a truck sale comparison, the buyer-side cost stack is dominated by sales/use tax, title fee, and any inspection or notary trip. Sellers should match the bill of sale format to the buyer's titling state because the buyer files the title transfer, not the seller.

Cross-state transfer: California to Florida

If the truck moves from California to Florida after the sale, the buyer registers and titles in Florida — not California. The seller's bill of sale should still match California sale-side conventions (because the sale happened there), but the buyer takes that bill of sale plus the endorsed California title to FLHSMV within 30 days of arrival. Florida will assess 6% sales or use tax on the purchase price when the new title is issued. Florida requires a VIN inspection for vehicles arriving from out of state — Out-of-state vehicles must have a VIN verification (HSMV 82042) completed before FL title is issued. The federal odometer disclosure rules apply regardless of which state owns the title at sale time; trucks newer than 2011 need a written odometer reading on the bill of sale or title. If a lien existed on the California title, the California lienholder must release it (REG 227) before FLHSMV will issue a clean title to the buyer.

Generate a state-specific truck bill of sale

Pick the buyer's titling state — the form ships pre-filled with the right odometer block, signature lines, and state-specific fields.

Frequently asked questions — California vs Florida

Is the truck bill of sale form different in California vs Florida?

Yes. California uses REG 135 (Bill of Sale) and Florida uses HSMV 82050 (Motor Vehicle, Mobile Home, or Vessel Bill of Sale). The buyer files the bill of sale at the state where they title the truck, so match the form to the titling state, not the sale state.

Which state has lower sales tax on a private-party truck sale, California or Florida?

Florida (6%) has the lower published state rate vs California (7.25%). Local county and city rates can shift this — check the buyer's home county before the sale.

What is the title transfer deadline for a truck in California vs Florida?

California requires the buyer to title the truck within 10 days of sale. Florida allows 30 days. Missing the deadline triggers late fees and back-dated registration penalties in both states.

Do I need to notarize the truck bill of sale in California or Florida?

Neither California nor Florida requires notarization of the truck bill of sale. A signed document with both parties' full names, addresses, and the date is sufficient.

If I sell a truck in California and the buyer registers it in Florida, which state's rules apply?

The buyer titles and registers the truck in Florida — Florida's rules govern the title transfer. The seller's bill of sale should still reflect California sale-side conventions because the sale closed there. FLHSMV will assess 6% sales/use tax on the purchase price when the new title is issued, regardless of where the sale occurred.

Sources: California DMV · FLHSMV · Last verified 2026-05-07 / 2026-05-07

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