Let the potential buyers know that the title still needs to be paid off. First they pay you, you create a bill of sale for them and hold onto the car. Send in the money and wait for the title. When the title arrives, sign it over to the buyer and give them the keys. It is a pain for the buyer to wait, but you shouldn't let them drive off without a title. You would be liable for an accident if they are in one, until the title is signed over.
Sell it privately for what you owe on it.
If you mean you still owe money on the car you don't sell it unless you can take the money and pay off the loan. The bank really owns your car and the pink slip, so if you sell it without the loan getting paid you still owe the money to the bank.
If it is repossessed, you will owe the difference between the loan amount and what they sell the vehicle for.
Even if you could you would still owe the bank the money they paid for the car.
Yes. You owe the amount of the unpaid loan, minus whatever they get when they sell it at auction (very little), plus their costs.
Yes, if the lender approves of the transfer of the loan.
Yes, though you have to pay off the loan before or as part of the process.
You owe the difference in what the car sells for and the balance on the note.
not if you still owe money on it
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.
If the car is worth less than you owe on it, you can try to get an unsecured loan from a local credit union or a local bank. You could also try to ask whatever financial institution has your car loan for an unsecured loan for whatever the car doesn't bring when you sell it.
No, they cannot. But if you borrowed money to buy the car, they can repossess it if you do not square things up. If they take it, they can sell it for you, and you will still owe the difference between what it sold for and what you had left to pay on it.