Not ordinarily. Each vehicle must be properly registered with the local motor vehicle department and properly licensed. If the plates and registration do not match, one could be subject to receiving a moving violation and be fined.
In some states, the license plate is issued to the owner of record and not the car. When the car is sold, the owner removes the plate, which then forces the new owner to re-register the vehicle in their name.
yes
When you sell a used car in California the plates stay on the car. After selling aÊused vehicle in California a title transfer needs to be done.
It is important to remove the license plates when selling a car.
When a car is sold, the license plates typically stay with the car and are transferred to the new owner.
It is not recommended to sell a car with license plates on it. It is important to remove the license plates before selling the car to avoid any potential legal or security issues.
No. The plates need to be on the same car they are registered to, so you can't go take the plates off a car of a dead person and put them on a different car. Let's say you inherit the car so you would go have the car put in your name and the plates would stay on the car but in your name. If you took the plates off a car to use on another car that would be stealing the plates. This could result in arrest.
Go the county tax office
yes
no.
The owner of the car must pay for the license plates fines. It is illegal to drive with expired license plates.
To drive it you have to have license plates or you could get pulled over or something like that
In Mississippi, truck license plates and car license plates differ primarily in classification and fees. Truck plates are designated for vehicles over a certain weight limit and often have different registration fees based on the vehicle's weight and intended use, such as commercial or personal. Additionally, truck plates may have specific designations indicating their purpose, while car plates are generally standardized for passenger vehicles. Overall, the distinction ensures that vehicles are appropriately categorized for taxation and regulation purposes.