How to Register a Car With a Lien on the Title
A car loan does not stop you from registering the vehicle — it just changes where the title goes. Every state lets a financed vehicle be registered to the borrower while recording the lender as a secured party. The mechanics differ: in title-holding states the owner gets the paper title with a lien notation, while in lender-holding and ELT states the lender keeps the title (electronically or on paper) until the loan is paid off.
What a lien means at registration time
A lien is a recorded interest in the vehicle. When you finance through a bank, credit union, captive lender (Toyota Financial, Ford Credit, GM Financial, Tesla Financing, etc.), or a buy-here-pay-here dealer, the lender files a lien with your state's DMV the same day the loan funds. The lien gives the lender three rights: (1) it must be paid off before the title can be transferred to anyone else; (2) it is enforced through repossession if you default; and (3) it survives the sale of the vehicle until released. Registration is independent — you receive plates, a registration card, and the right to drive — but the title is encumbered.
If you are paying cash or your loan is from a private party (a friend or family member who did not file a lien), the title comes to you free and clear at registration. Most cash buyers complete dealer-or-private registration the same way as a lien-encumbered buyer minus the lender paperwork. Buying from a relative? See our family title transfer guide for the gift-vs-sale tax distinction. Shopping for the loan itself? Our bad credit auto loans guide covers subprime lender approval criteria, and our car loan refinance guide covers the post-origination rate-recovery path.
Two title-holding models
Model A — title to the lender
The DMV issues the paper title naming the borrower as the owner and the lender as the lien-holder, then mails the title directly to the lender. The borrower never sees the title until the loan is paid off. This is the dominant model for the financed-vehicle population. About 30 states still use this paper-mail model for at least some lenders, though most large national banks have migrated to ELT (see below).
Model B — title to the owner with lien notation
The DMV issues the title with the lender's name printed in the lien-holder field. The borrower keeps the title at home. The lien is enforceable, but the borrower has the physical document. Eight states use this owner-held model: Kentucky, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, New York, Oklahoma, and Wisconsin (per AAMVA's 2024 ELT survey). California and Vermont also issue paper titles to owners with a lien notation under specific lender opt-out conditions.
Model C — Electronic Lien & Title (ELT)
ELT replaces the paper title with a state-database record. The lender appears as the electronic lien-holder. No paper title is printed until the loan is released, at which point the state mails a "clean" paper title to the owner. ELT is mandatory in 16 states and optional in another 25. In ELT states, registration paperwork is faster, fraud is lower (no lost-title claims), and lien releases happen in 1-3 days instead of 7-30. AAMVA's published ELT-mandatory states for 2026 are AZ, FL, HI, ID, LA, MA, MS, NE, NV, NH, NY, OH, PA, SC, TX, and VA.
State-by-state lien handling
The table summarizes which model each state uses by default. ELT-mandatory means lenders must use electronic lien filing; ELT-optional means lenders may choose paper or ELT. "Title to lender" means the paper title is mailed to the lender; "title to owner" means the borrower receives the paper title with a lien notation.
| State | Default model | ELT status |
|---|---|---|
| Alabama | Title to lender | ELT optional |
| Alaska | Title to lender | No ELT |
| Arizona | ELT | ELT mandatory |
| Arkansas | Title to lender | ELT optional |
| California | Title to lender (paper opt-in for owner) | ELT optional |
| Colorado | Title to lender | ELT optional |
| Connecticut | Title to lender | ELT optional |
| Delaware | Title to lender | ELT optional |
| Florida | ELT | ELT mandatory |
| Georgia | Title to lender | ELT optional |
| Hawaii | ELT | ELT mandatory |
| Idaho | ELT | ELT mandatory |
| Illinois | Title to lender | ELT optional |
| Indiana | Title to lender | ELT optional |
| Iowa | Title to lender | ELT optional |
| Kansas | Title to lender | ELT optional |
| Kentucky | Title to owner | ELT optional |
| Louisiana | ELT | ELT mandatory |
| Maine | Title to lender | No ELT |
| Maryland | Title to owner | ELT optional |
| Massachusetts | ELT | ELT mandatory |
| Michigan | Title to owner | ELT optional |
| Minnesota | Title to owner | ELT optional |
| Mississippi | ELT | ELT mandatory |
| Missouri | Title to owner | ELT optional |
| Montana | Title to owner | ELT optional |
| Nebraska | ELT | ELT mandatory |
| Nevada | ELT | ELT mandatory |
| New Hampshire | ELT | ELT mandatory |
| New Jersey | Title to lender | ELT optional |
| New Mexico | Title to lender | ELT optional |
| New York | Title to owner / ELT (banks) | ELT mandatory for banks |
| North Carolina | Title to lender | ELT optional |
| North Dakota | Title to lender | No ELT |
| Ohio | ELT | ELT mandatory |
| Oklahoma | Title to owner | ELT optional |
| Oregon | Title to lender | ELT optional |
| Pennsylvania | ELT | ELT mandatory |
| Rhode Island | Title to lender | ELT optional |
| South Carolina | ELT | ELT mandatory |
| South Dakota | Title to lender | ELT optional |
| Tennessee | Title to lender | ELT optional |
| Texas | ELT | ELT mandatory |
| Utah | Title to lender | ELT optional |
| Vermont | Title to lender | No ELT |
| Virginia | ELT | ELT mandatory |
| Washington | Title to lender | ELT optional |
| West Virginia | Title to lender | ELT optional |
| Wisconsin | Title to owner | ELT optional |
| Wyoming | Title to lender | No ELT |
Source: AAMVA Electronic Lien & Title 2024 program survey, individual state DMV publications.
Documents required
Most dealer-financed transactions handle the lien filing for you — the F&I (Finance & Insurance) office submits everything to the DMV the same day. For private-party financed purchases or out-of-state moves, you assemble the packet yourself. Standard requirements:
- Bill of sale showing the purchase price, VIN, and odometer reading. See our state bill-of-sale rules.
- Manufacturer's Certificate of Origin (MCO) for new vehicles, or the prior owner's title properly endorsed for used vehicles.
- Lender information: legal name, mailing address, lien account number, and the lender's filer ID for ELT states. Get this from your dealer's F&I or directly from your lender's customer service line before the DMV visit.
- Odometer disclosure (federal requirement for vehicles up to 20 years old per NHTSA's 2021 rule).
- Proof of insurance including comprehensive and collision (most lenders contractually require it on financed vehicles). See our insurance-at-registration guide, gap insurance overview, and comp vs collision coverage for the lender requirement detail.
- State ID and proof of residency.
- Lien filing fee: $5-$25 in most states, in addition to standard registration and title fees.
Out-of-state buyer scenario
If you finance a vehicle in one state and register it in another (a common scenario for moving buyers, military, or anyone using an out-of-state lender), the title moves through three offices: the seller's state, the lender's home state, and your registering state. The cleanest sequence:
- Get a temporary tag from the seller's state at purchase. See our temporary-tag rules.
- The seller's state issues a title to the lender (or files an ELT record).
- Your state's DMV requests the title from the lender, citing the new VIN and your residency.
- The lender releases the title to your state's DMV (paper or ELT-to-ELT transfer between states).
- Your state issues a new title in its format, re-records the lien, and issues plates.
Total elapsed time: typically 30-60 days for paper-title states, 10-20 days for ELT-to-ELT transfers. Drive on the temporary tag in the meantime; if the temp tag expires before the new title arrives, ask the registering state for a temporary registration permit (most states issue one for $5-$25 to cover the gap).
Refinancing and lien re-recording
When you refinance, the old lender files a lien release and the new lender files a new lien. Both filings happen at the state DMV. The mechanics:
- ELT states: electronic — the new lender files a notice and the state pushes a release request to the old lender. The old lender confirms within 1-3 business days.
- Paper-title states with title-to-lender: the new lender requests the title from the old lender, the old lender mails it with a release endorsement, and the new lender files it back with the state to record the new lien.
- Paper-title states with title-to-owner: the borrower physically signs the existing title to release the old lien, the new lender records its lien on a new title application, and the state issues a re-printed title.
Most states charge a $5-$25 lien filing fee on top of any reissued-title fee. Refinancing a few months before payoff is rarely worth the paperwork and fees; refinancing in the first half of a long-term loan often is.
Cross-state move with active lien
Moving with an active loan adds a step to the standard cross-state re-registration process — see our out-of-state vehicle registration guide for grace periods by state. Before visiting the new state's DMV:
- Notify your lender of the new garaging address and registration state. Most lenders require this within 30 days of the move (it is a contract term). The lender updates internal records and may need to update insurance bookings.
- Request your lender's permission/consent to transfer the title to the new state. Most national lenders handle this through a dedicated "out-of-state title transfer" team.
- The lender either mails the original title to the new state's DMV (most common) or releases the ELT record electronically (faster, no shipping).
- The new state records the lien on its title and issues plates.
Allow 30-90 days. Cross-state moves where the old state is paper-title and the new state is ELT-mandatory (e.g., Alaska to Arizona) are the slowest because the paper title must arrive, be inspected, surrendered, and re-keyed into the ELT system.
Selling a financed vehicle
You can sell a financed vehicle, but you cannot transfer clean title until the loan is paid off. The two paths:
- Pay off at closing: the buyer's payment goes directly to the lender (or through an escrow service), the lender releases the lien, the title is endorsed and transferred. Most banks and credit unions can do this same-day for cash payoffs; loan-servicers like Capital One Auto, Chase Auto, and Ally let you generate a 10-day payoff quote online.
- Sell to a dealer: the dealer pays off the loan as part of the trade-in, takes possession of the vehicle, and receives the title from the lender. Easier for the seller but typically yields a lower price.
Selling to a private party with an active lien requires more care: the buyer should write the check (or wire the funds) directly to the lender, not to you. Once the lender confirms payoff, the lender ships the title with the lien release. See our lien-release timeline for the post-payoff sequence.
Common pitfalls
- Stale lender address — the lender's mailing address on file at the DMV must match the lender's current servicing address. Loan portfolios get sold; if your loan was originated by Lender A and is now serviced by Lender B, the DMV record may reference Lender A. The release will fail until the address is updated.
- ELT-to-paper state transitions — moving from an ELT-mandatory state to a non-ELT state (or vice versa) requires the lender to use a different filing system. Some smaller lenders are not registered with both; expect delays.
- Buy-here-pay-here lenders — small dealer-finance lots sometimes fail to file the lien correctly with the state. If you suspect the lien was never recorded, check your state DMV's title-search tool; if it isn't on file, you have a clean title even though the loan is active.
- Title fee surprises — every state lien filing carries a separate fee. See our title vs registration fee guide for the breakdown.
- Insurance lapse — the lender often requires the dealer/insurer to confirm comprehensive coverage at registration. If your liability-only policy was filed instead, the lender can force-place insurance at 2-3x the cost.
Membership and warranty resources
Two services that help with the paperwork side of financed-vehicle ownership:
Sources
- AAMVA — Electronic Lien & Title (ELT) program
- CFPB — Auto loan title FAQ
- NHTSA — Odometer disclosure rules
- Each state's official DMV — see linked individual state pages above