Dealer vs Private Party: Registration Differences

Buying from a dealer versus a private party changes who handles the registration paperwork, when sales tax is collected, and how quickly the new owner can legally drive home. Dealers file most forms electronically and issue a temporary tag at the curb; private-party buyers do every step in person at the DMV and pay sales tax there.

The core difference

A franchised or licensed used-car dealer is what most states call a "title agent." That status lets the dealer collect sales tax, submit the title application to the state's titling system, and print a temporary registration tag before the customer leaves the lot. A private seller has none of those powers. The buyer must take the signed title, bill of sale, and proof of insurance to a DMV office (or state-approved tag agent) and complete the transfer personally.

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What a dealer actually does

The buyer leaves with a temp tag, copy of title application, and sales contract. No DMV visit required in roughly 45 states.

Dealer documentation fees in 2026

StateDoc fee capTypical 2026 charge
California$85 (regulated)$85
New York$75 (regulated)$75
Oregon$150 electronic / $115 paper$150
Minnesota$125 (regulated)$125
Louisiana$200 (regulated)$200
FloridaNo cap$899 average
GeorgiaNo cap$799 average
Texas$150 recommended$150-$225
TennesseeNo cap$799 average
AlabamaNo cap$699 average

Florida, Georgia, Tennessee, Alabama, NC, SC, VA have no statutory cap, and dealers routinely charge $700-$999. The fee is negotiable in every state. State-specific dealer rules: Florida, California, Texas.

What a private-party buyer must do

  1. Inspect the title for liens. A title showing a lienholder is not transferable until the lien is released.
  2. Sign the title in the assignment section, with both parties present at signing in states requiring notarization (AZ, KY, LA, MT, NV, NC, OH, OK, PA, WV, WY)
  3. Obtain insurance in buyer's name before driving the vehicle
  4. Visit the DMV (or AAA in CA, county tax assessor in TX) within state's deadline (10 days FL, PA; 60 days VT)
  5. Pay sales tax at the DMV based on either purchase price or state's "book value," whichever is higher (IL, IN, MA, MI, MN)
  6. Pay title fee ($15-$165) and registration fee, same as for dealer purchase

DMV issues registration card and plate same day in most states; permanent title arrives by mail in 4-12 weeks.

Sales-tax floor: the private-party trap

Private-party buyers in book-value states cannot reduce sales tax by writing a low price. If the state's reference value (typically NADA clean retail) exceeds the stated price, the DMV charges tax on the higher figure. A 2018 Honda Civic sold privately for $9,000 in Massachusetts with a $12,500 NADA value will be taxed on $12,500, producing $781.25 in sales tax instead of $562.50. Dealer transactions are not subject to the floor because the dealer's invoice is the audit record.

CarMax, Carvana, and other large used-car retailers

CarMax, Carvana, EchoPark, and Vroom are licensed dealers in every state where they operate. Two practical differences:

Warranty and lemon-law differences

FTC Used Car Rule, updated effective July 2025, requires dealers to post a Buyers Guide on every used vehicle. Private sellers exempt.

Timeline comparison

StepDealer purchasePrivate-party purchase
Drive home legallySame day (temp tag)Same day in 18 states; otherwise trailer
Sales tax paidAt dealershipAt DMV, within 10-60 days
Plates issued4-8 weeks by mailSame-day at DMV counter
Title received4-12 weeks by mail4-12 weeks by mail
Inspection (if required)Dealer arrangesBuyer arranges within 30 days

Buyers wanting plates same-day actually do better with private-party purchase in New York, Pennsylvania, and Ohio.

Save on auto insurance while you're at it

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