Title Transfer Between Family Members: Gift vs Sale
Transferring a car between family members is one of the few moments where the same paperwork costs $0 or thousands of dollars depending on which box you check. A documented gift between immediate family is exempt from sales tax in 43 states plus DC. A "sale" — even at $1 — gets taxed at fair market value in 26 states because state DMVs cross-check book value before issuing the new title.
Gift vs sale: the tax difference
Two pieces of paperwork drive the outcome: the title's transfer-of-ownership section and a state affidavit-of-gift form. If the donor signs both correctly and the new owner is in a recognized family category, the DMV waives sales tax. Title fee, registration fee, and any property-tax components still apply, but the largest line item — sales tax at 4-9% of fair market value — falls away.
Selling between family members works the opposite way. Most states write the rule as "sales tax is owed on the actual purchase price or on fair market value, whichever is higher." That second clause is what catches people who try to write a $1 bill of sale to a sibling. The DMV looks up the National Automobile Dealers Association (NADA) or Kelley Blue Book value and taxes the higher figure. A $12,000 sedan transferred at $1 is still treated as a $12,000 transaction in 26 states; in the other 25, the seller can use a written low-price affidavit but most states require the new owner to certify the price under penalty of perjury.
The cleanest tax-free path between immediate family is a fully documented gift on the state's standard form. The IRS's federal gift tax is a separate matter — see section below — and only kicks in if the value exceeds the annual exclusion ($19,000 per recipient in 2026 per current IRS guidance).
State-by-state gift exemption rules
The table summarizes whether each state exempts immediate-family vehicle gifts from sales tax, the state's definition of "immediate family," and the official affidavit-of-gift form name. Forms are downloadable free from each state DMV; the linked state pages provide official sources. Gift-exemption applicability shown is for the buyer/recipient — the donor never owes sales tax on a gift they are giving.
| State | Gift exempt? | Family definition | Form name |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alabama | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild | MVT 5-1A Affidavit |
| Alaska | No state sales tax | N/A | Form 812 |
| Arizona | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild | 96-0236 Sale-Gift Form |
| Arkansas | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, grandparent, grandchild | Form 10-381 |
| California | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild, in-law | REG 256 — Statement of Facts |
| Colorado | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling | DR 2444 Gift Statement |
| Connecticut | Yes | Spouse, parent, child | AU-463 Affidavit |
| Delaware | No state sales tax (4.25% doc fee waived for family) | Spouse, parent, child, sibling | MV-256 |
| District of Columbia | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent | Vehicle Gift Affidavit |
| Florida | Yes — limited | Spouse, parent, child only | HSMV 82042 |
| Georgia | Yes — TAVT exemption | Spouse, parent, child, sibling | MV-16 Affidavit |
| Hawaii | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling | Affidavit of Gift |
| Idaho | Yes | Spouse, parent, child | ITD 3733 Gift |
| Illinois | Yes — RUT-50 reduced rate | Spouse, parent, child, sibling | RUT-50 + Family Affidavit |
| Indiana | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild | Form 48841 |
| Iowa | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild | Form 411107 |
| Kansas | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild | TR-212 Gift Affidavit |
| Kentucky | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild | TC 96-182 Affidavit |
| Louisiana | Yes | Spouse, parent, child | OMV Gift Affidavit |
| Maine | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild | MVT-7 Affidavit |
| Maryland | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild, aunt/uncle | VR-103 Gift Cert |
| Massachusetts | Yes — limited | Spouse, parent, child only | RMV Affidavit MVU-26 |
| Michigan | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild, in-law | TR-11L Gift Statement |
| Minnesota | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild | PS2080 Gift Affidavit |
| Mississippi | Yes | Spouse, parent, child | Form 78-006 |
| Missouri | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling | DOR-1957 |
| Montana | No state sales tax | N/A | MV1 Title App |
| Nebraska | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild | Form 6 Gift |
| Nevada | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild | VP-203 Gift Affidavit |
| New Hampshire | No state sales tax | N/A | TDMV 23 Title App |
| New Jersey | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild | OS/SS-7 Gift Affidavit |
| New Mexico | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, grandparent, grandchild | MVD-10018 Affidavit |
| New York | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild | DTF-802 Statement |
| North Carolina | Yes — HUT exemption | Spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild, in-law | MVR-613 Family Affidavit |
| North Dakota | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild | SFN 18609 Gift |
| Ohio | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild, in-law | BMV-3724 Gift Affidavit |
| Oklahoma | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, grandparent, grandchild | Form 794 Gift Affidavit |
| Oregon | No state sales tax | N/A | Form 226 Title App |
| Pennsylvania | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild, in-law | MV-13 Family Affidavit |
| Rhode Island | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild | TR-1 Family Gift |
| South Carolina | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild | Form 4031 Affidavit |
| South Dakota | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild | MV-009 Gift Statement |
| Tennessee | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild | RV-F1301201 Affidavit |
| Texas | Yes — flat $10 gift tax | Spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild, in-law | Form 14-317 Gift Affidavit |
| Utah | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild | TC-661 Gift Statement |
| Vermont | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild | VT-013 Gift Affidavit |
| Virginia | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild | SUT-1 Gift Affidavit |
| Washington | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild | Affidavit of Gift |
| West Virginia | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild, in-law | DMV-5-TR Affidavit |
| Wisconsin | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild | MV2928 Gift Statement |
| Wyoming | Yes | Spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild | Affidavit of Gift |
Parent-child transfers
Parent-child transfers are the most common family transfer and the easiest to document. Every state with a sales tax exempts true gifts from a parent to a biological or legally adopted child, and vice versa. The donor signs the title's transfer-of-ownership section, completes the gift affidavit, and the new owner takes the package to the DMV. Total registration cost is usually limited to title fee ($15-$95) plus the standard registration fee for the year. Our gifted car registration guide covers the same ground from the recipient's side.
Two parent-child wrinkles to watch for:
- Stepchildren and foster children — about half of states extend the exemption, but Florida, Connecticut, and Massachusetts do not. The donor and recipient should confirm the relationship qualifies before relying on the gift exemption.
- Gifting to a minor child — the title cannot legally be in a minor's name in most states. The vehicle is titled to a parent or legal guardian as custodian under the state's UTMA (Uniform Transfers to Minors Act) framework. The minor takes ownership at age 18 (or 21 in some states).
If the parent-child transfer happens across state lines, the recipient registers the vehicle in their state of residence using the new state's gift exemption rules, not the donor's. See our out-of-state vehicle registration guide for the cross-state procedure.
Spouse transfers
Spouse-to-spouse transfers are universally exempt from sales tax in every state with a sales tax. The exemption usually requires both signatures on the title, plus the gift affidavit naming the recipient as the spouse. Common-law spouses are recognized in the seven common-law states (CO, IA, KS, MT, NH, SC, TX, plus DC); other states require a marriage certificate.
Two specific spouse situations:
- Adding a spouse to the title — most states allow you to add a spouse without re-registering or paying sales tax. The new title shows both names with "AND" or "OR" between them. "AND" requires both signatures to sell; "OR" lets either spouse sell. Joint-ownership rules vary by state.
- Removing a spouse — typically also tax-free with a notarized release. Removing a deceased spouse usually requires a death certificate and the survivorship affidavit.
Divorce decree transfers
A vehicle awarded in a divorce decree transfers without sales tax in every state when the transfer is documented by the court order. The recipient brings (1) the title signed by both spouses or by the awarding spouse alone, (2) a certified copy of the divorce decree showing the vehicle award, and (3) the standard title-transfer application. The DMV typically waives the gift affidavit because the court order substitutes for it.
Two complications:
- Lien still active — the lender's interest is unaffected by divorce. If the loan is in the awarded spouse's name only, the lender can refuse to allow the transfer until refinanced. If both names are on the loan, the lender retains the right to pursue both regardless of the divorce decree. See our financed car registration guide for the lender side.
- Title in only one name despite community property — community-property states (AZ, CA, ID, LA, NV, NM, TX, WA, WI) treat vehicles acquired during marriage as joint property even if titled to only one spouse. The court order resolves the ownership question at divorce.
Inheritance transfers
When the title-holder dies, the vehicle transfers to a beneficiary either through formal probate or, more commonly for vehicles, through a streamlined small-estate process. Each state offers one or more of:
- Survivorship affidavit — for surviving spouses in joint-tenancy or community-property states. Brief affidavit + death certificate.
- Small-estate affidavit — for estates below the state threshold (typically $20,000-$150,000). Affidavit + death certificate + standard title transfer.
- Letters testamentary or letters of administration — for full probate. Issued by the probate court to the executor.
- Transfer-on-death (TOD) registration — available in 17 states (AZ, AR, CA, CO, CT, DE, IL, IN, KS, MO, NE, NV, OH, VA, VT, WI, WY). The owner names a TOD beneficiary on the registration; at death the beneficiary registers the vehicle with the death certificate alone.
Inherited vehicles are exempt from sales tax in all states. The estate may owe federal estate tax for very large estates (above $13.99M in 2026 per IRS guidance), but a vehicle alone almost never triggers it. See our inherited car registration guide for a step-by-step.
Federal gift-tax considerations
The federal gift tax is separate from state sales tax. The IRS lets every donor give up to $19,000 per recipient per year (2026 annual exclusion) without any federal gift-tax filing. A married couple can give $38,000 jointly to a single recipient. Most family vehicle gifts fit within this exclusion — the median used-car transaction is around $28,000 per the BLS, and even a near-new $40,000 SUV gift to a married child sits within the joint-couple limit.
Above the annual exclusion, the donor files IRS Form 709 for the year of the gift. The excess applies against the donor's lifetime exemption ($13.99M in 2026) — no federal tax is actually owed unless cumulative lifetime gifts exceed that figure. The form is informational for most families. Always check the current-year exclusion at IRS gift-tax FAQ before relying on the figures here.
Common DMV mistakes
- Using a bill of sale instead of a gift affidavit — the bill of sale implies a sale; the DMV will tax it. Always use the state-specific gift form. Our bill of sale guide covers when each form applies.
- Listing $1 as the purchase price — 26 states cross-check book value and tax the higher figure regardless. The dollar-bill purchase trick stopped working over a decade ago.
- Skipping notarization where required — Louisiana, Maryland, Montana, North Carolina, and Pennsylvania require the donor's signature on the gift affidavit to be notarized. Bring the form unsigned and notarize at the DMV or a UPS Store before submission.
- Forgetting odometer disclosure — gifts still need a federal odometer statement for vehicles less than 20 years old. The donor signs the disclosure at the time of transfer, not the recipient.
- Lien on the donated vehicle — the lender must release the lien before the gift can transfer cleanly. Otherwise the lien follows the vehicle into the recipient's title. See our lien-release guide.
- Cross-state gift — the recipient registers in their state, not the donor's. Make sure the recipient's state recognizes the donor-recipient relationship as immediate family before relying on the exemption.
Sources
- IRS — Gift-tax FAQ
- IRS — Form 709 instructions
- USA.gov — State motor-vehicle services
- AAMVA — Title transfer standards
- Each state's official DMV — see linked individual state pages above