Cars & Driving · Statewide
Clear the Lien Paperwork Before Selling a New York-Titled Car
A paid-off car loan can still leave title paperwork to finish, especially if the buyer needs proof the lien was satisfied.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Before selling a car that once had a loan, look at the title, not just the payoff email. DMV says removing a lienholder from a New York title requires original proof that the lien was satisfied, the original current title certificate, and the fee.
DMV also says a title with a listed lien can be transferred if the new owner receives the original proof that the lien was satisfied, but if that proof is missing, the lien may stay on the new title. That is an avoidable closing problem for a private sale. Ask the lender for the original lien release, keep a copy for your records, and decide whether to remove the lien before the sale or hand the buyer the original release with the title.
That little piece of paper can matter more than people expect. A buyer may be nervous about a lien printed on the title, and DMV will care about the original proof, not just a verbal promise that the loan was paid. If time allows, clearing the lien from the title before listing the car can make the sale feel cleaner. If not, make sure the buyer receives the original lien release and understands what DMV says about transferring a title with a satisfied lien.
This is a good errand to do slowly. Check the title, ask the lender for the proper original release, and keep copies of anything you hand over. A private car sale is much easier when the paperwork looks as clean as the car.