As long as you sell it for enough to pay the balance on the loan off there is no problem. Just contact the lender and find out what the payoff on the loan is, and you will know how much money you must come up with after the sale. You may also work something out with the new buyer taking over the payments and paying you the difference in value and balance on the note. Or you may have to pay the buyer an amount if you are upside down on the loan, in other words the car is not worth what you owe on it.
i doubt it No, you must pay it off and get the title first
You can pay it off and sell it, or you can get it fixed, or you can just let it sit there and keep making payments on a car you can't use.
You cannot sell a car you have a loan on if the lender has a lien on the vehicle. You will need permission from the lien holder to sell the car. If the lender has no lien on the vehicle then you can sell it if you wish. The title will list any lien holder.
You can't sell it. You don't own it. The bank or loan company owns the car. You need their permission to sell the car and transfer title.
If you have a lien on your vehicle, you can sell it for any amount. The vehicle is still subject to the lien which means that the purchaser can lose the vehicle if the lien holder collects on it.
yes
If you are in a Chapter 13 plan, you have to get permission to pay off a vehicle or sell a vehicle that is included in your plan.
Yes, you can sell a vehicle that is still being financed. You will need to pay the loan company the balance of the loan with the sale proceeds in order to give the buyer a clear title. If you have to sell the car for less than you owe, you will be responsible for paying the balance out of your own pocket in order to transact a legal sale.
no but you may find them every once in a while
Either pay off the lien and then sell the vehicle, or sell the vehicle and use the money to pay off the lien.
Medicare isn't like welfare. You can sell your home, move to an apartment and still have medicare.
I believe you can sell it if you are the beneficiary, or if you inherited the vehicle.