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At minimum, you must satisfy (pay off) the lien. Talk to a dealership---NOT the one you plan to do business with, but call a different one---they can give you information. When you go to sell the car, keep in mind the lien amount in your overall price you want for the car. Make sure you get paperwork when you pay off the lien.
The question should be. Should you ever buy a car with a lien on it. The answer is absolutely not, no, not if you are smart.
If theyre out of business there wont be a car dealership
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 are gay if you read this
Typically, no a felon cannot sell a car at a dealership in California. Unless, of course, they are the outright owner of the car in which they are trying to sell to the dealership, (and have all the paperwork to prove this true) OR they are under an employment agreement with the dealership, and it is their job to sell cars at the dealership.
no
If you sell a car with a lien on it, which is a title pawn. You must pay the lien off before the car is clear and you can get the title back.
In most cases, no. It is done all the time. Consider that when someone trades in a vehicle that is still owed on, they are in effect selling the vehicle to the dealership. That the dealership writes the loan for the new car, and transfers the unpaid balance of the first to it, means only that the dealership bought the car, but the buyer of the new car (the former owner) paid for it. Additionally, when the vehicle is sold, before the lien holder will release the title, the unpaid balance must be paid.
yes because you don't have to pay for the car. But if the dealership does not want to buy it you can't sell it to them
You cannot sell a car with a lien against it without getting a lien release from the lender. To do otherwise is illegal.
No. The lienholder is the only entity with a right to repossess.