Inherited Car Registration: Probate and Title Transfer Guide
Inheriting a vehicle in 2026 takes one of four paths: full probate, a small-estate affidavit if the estate falls under the state threshold, a transfer-on-death (TOD) title in the 22 states that allow them, or automatic transfer through a joint title with right of survivorship. The path determines whether the heir waits weeks or walks into the DMV the same day.
The four ways a vehicle changes hands at death
Probate is the default. A court validates the will (or applies intestate-succession rules), names a personal representative, and issues letters testamentary. Probate adds 4-12 months and court fees. States have built three workarounds: small-estate affidavit, TOD title, and joint ownership with right of survivorship.
Small-estate thresholds: when probate is optional
| State | Threshold (2026) | Vehicle shortcut |
|---|---|---|
| California | $184,500 | Form DL 60, 40-day wait |
| Texas | $75,000 (excluding homestead) | Form VTR-262 heirship affidavit |
| Florida | $75,000 | HSMV 82152 affidavit |
| New York | $50,000 | Voluntary admin via Surrogate's Court |
| Ohio | $100,000 (spouse) / $35,000 | BMV 3773, no court |
| Nevada | $100,000 (spouse) / $25,000 | Affidavit, 40-day wait |
| Illinois | $100,000 | Small-estate affidavit |
| Pennsylvania | $50,000 | MV-39 affidavit |
| Arizona | $75,000 | 30-day wait |
| Michigan | $28,394 (indexed) | TR-29 certification |
Indexed thresholds change each January. Michigan, Oregon, and several others tie the figure to inflation. Heirs working a borderline estate should check current numbers on state DMV or probate-court site. State-by-state fee tables on California, Florida, and New York.
Transfer-on-death registration: 22 states
TOD titles are the cleanest tool an owner can set up before death. The owner files a beneficiary designation with the DMV; at death, the named beneficiary presents a death certificate and walks out with a new title in their own name — no court, no affidavit, no probate exposure.
The most flexible programs in 2026: California, Nevada, Ohio, and Kansas — multiple beneficiaries allowed, revocation any time, minimal paperwork. Arizona, Connecticut, Illinois, Indiana, Missouri, Nebraska, Vermont, and Virginia also allow TOD with narrower rules.
States that do NOT offer TOD vehicle titles in 2026: New York, Florida, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Washington, Georgia, North Carolina, Michigan, Tennessee. Heirs in those states must use small-estate affidavits or full probate. Ohio charges no extra fee to add a TOD beneficiary, and Nevada processes the post-death transfer in a single counter visit.
Joint title with right of survivorship
A title held jointly with right of survivorship transfers automatically the moment one owner dies. The survivor brings the original title and a certified death certificate to the DMV, pays a re-issue fee ($15-$35), and receives a clean title. No probate because the deceased's interest never enters the estate. Catch: title must explicitly state "JTWROS," "or," or the state-specific survivorship language.
Documentation: what every DMV asks for
- Certified death certificate (not photocopy). Most states want one original.
- Original vehicle title, or duplicate-title application if lost.
- Court-issued letters testamentary or letters of administration (probate path), small-estate affidavit (under-threshold path), TOD beneficiary form, or proof of joint ownership.
- Government-issued photo ID for the heir.
- Odometer disclosure if vehicle is under 20 model years old.
- Proof of insurance in the heir's name, required at registration in 49 states.
- Lien release if loan was paid off at or after death.
Sales tax: most states waive on family inheritance
Forty-three states + DC exempt inherited vehicles from sales tax when transferred to a spouse, child, parent, sibling, grandparent, or grandchild. Exemption claimed on the title transfer form: California REG 256, Florida HSMV 82040 with inheritance box, Texas Form 14-317. Exemption does not extend to subsequent sale.
Inheritance vs gift: federal tax treatment
Inheritance and gift are not interchangeable. There is no federal gift tax on an inherited vehicle because inheritance is not a gift. Federal estate tax exemption sits at $13.99M per individual for 2026 — almost no estate pays federal tax on a passenger vehicle. Six states (IA, KY, MD, NE, NJ, PA) still levy state-level inheritance tax, but spouses and direct descendants are exempt or face very low rates.
Step-up basis: capital gains reset at death
Federal step-up basis is the quiet financial advantage of inheriting rather than receiving as a gift. Heir's cost basis becomes fair market value on date of death, not what decedent originally paid. A 2018 truck purchased for $52,000 and worth $24,000 at death has a $24,000 basis to the heir. If heir sells immediately for $24,500, taxable gain is $500, not $27,500-negative. Personal vehicles rarely produce capital gains, but classic and collector cars frequently do, and step-up applies the same way under IRC §1014.
Multi-state probate
If deceased lived in Arizona but owned a car titled in Florida, two probate proceedings may be needed: primary in Arizona and "ancillary" in Florida limited to the vehicle. Several states bypass with out-of-state small-estate affidavits, but Florida, Texas, New York generally require ancillary action. The vehicle's state of titling controls.
Time limits and selling an inherited vehicle
Most states impose 30-90 day window to begin transfer and 6-month to 1-year window to complete title transfer once probate concludes. Florida requires register within 30 days of taking possession; California allows 10 days. Late transfers trigger penalties of $25-$250.
Selling an inherited car before title is in heir's name is rarely permitted. Standard sequence: title transfers from decedent to estate (in personal representative's name), then estate to heir, then heir to buyer. Some states collapse the middle step with notarized representative signature.
Save on auto insurance while you're at it
An inherited vehicle still needs insurance under your name. Compare quotes:
Sources
- California DMV — Transfer of Ownership After an Owner Dies
- Florida HSMV — Vehicle Titles
- NCSL — Probate and Estate Administration
- AARP — Transfer-on-Death Car Titles by State
- IRS Publication 559 — Survivors, Executors, and Administrators