Im almost positive you can. if you need to know ask auto shops or look online.
No, the new car dealer pays off your current car and adds any money you still owe on your current car to the cost of the new car.
Don do it! You owe tickets they toe your new car after registration
The identification plates Help , the officer ; To identify Your Car and register Your ticket to enable Any confuses-ion , Also The new speeding Camera Takes A photo near the plates and by 2-3 Days you get your ticket/bill that you owe thur the mail .
Don't do it. Buying a new car when you still owe on a current vehicle it very foolish. Pay the one you have off before even considering buying another car.
The balance you owe on the car that is getting traded in will be added to your new car loan. Example You owe 10,000 for the car you want to trade in They give you 6,000 for trade in your new car costs 20,000 you will either have to pay that 4,000 or they will add it onto your new car loan from your car you traded in.
Contact the bank for the payoff amount. Send them that amount and they will send the title. You can then transfer the title to the new owner.
When you refinance your car, you get a new loan for the remaining amount that you owe. You cannot cash out unless you sell the car for more than you owe.
Yes, if the lender approves of the transfer of the loan.
If you are trading in a vehicle in which money is still owed, the amount of money outstanding will be rolled over onto the new loan for the new car you are buying. If you owe $2500 on your current car, and are buying a car for $10,000, regardless if it is worth less than your current car, the $2500 note will be added onto the new loan unless you can pay it off beforehand.
yes you can trade it in. But if you owe more than what the dealer is going to give you for the car the remaining balance will be added to your new loan
Lets say your financing a brand new car. You owe $25,000 on it and when it gets reposessed you still owe $18,000. The reposession company will sell the car and that gets subtracted from what you owe. Lets say they sell it for $7,500. So they would subtract $7,500 from $18,000 which means when all is said and done, you still owe $11,500 on the car.
The balance will be added to the price of the new car