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Create, preview, copy, print, and download your bill of sale for free. No paywall to make the document.
Create a DMV-ready, state-specific bill of sale in minutes — free, no signup, no subscription. Your details never leave your browser.
Create, preview, copy, print, and download your bill of sale for free. No paywall to make the document.
Start instantly. We never ask for your email to use the tool — and there is no subscription, ever.
Everything runs in your browser. Your names, prices, and VINs never touch our servers.
Pick a type to start, or browse all templates.
No walls of text, no surprise paywall. The tool is the hero.
Choose what you are selling and where — the tool applies the right state rules.
Add the parties, item, and price. The document builds live with inline validation.
Copy, print, or download free, then follow your state-specific signing checklist.
Every competitor's worst reviews are about surprise billing. We flipped the model.
| Feature | Bill of Sale Generator | Typical subscription sites |
|---|---|---|
| Create & download a document | Free | Free trial, then charged |
| Account / email required | No | Usually yes |
| Subscription or auto-renewal | Never | Common ($39–$50/mo) |
| Real per-state notary & DMV rules | Yes | Often generic |
| Live validation & completeness score | Yes | Rare |
| Your data leaves your browser | No — fully private | Uploaded to their servers |
| Professional PDF + Word | $4.99 once | Locked behind subscription |
Comparison reflects common practices among paid template/legal-form sites as of 2026. See our simple pricing →
Notary rules, witness rules, official forms, and DMV steps — tailored, not generic.
Plain-English answers, backed by official sources.
In most states, no. For a private vehicle sale, only a handful of states require the title transfer to be notarized: Louisiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, and Kentucky. A few others (such as Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia, and Oklahoma) require notarization only in specific tax situations. For most personal property, notarization is never required.
Generally no. For titled property like a car or boat, the title is what proves ownership. A bill of sale proves that a sale happened and records the price, date, and terms — it supports the title transfer but does not replace it. For untitled property (furniture, equipment, electronics), the signed bill of sale is usually the main proof of ownership.
Yes. A handwritten bill of sale is legal as long as it includes the required details — the parties, a description of the item, the price, the date, and both signatures. Using a structured template simply makes sure nothing important is left out.
A title is the official certificate of ownership for a vehicle or boat, issued by the state. A bill of sale is a private record of the sale itself — who sold it, who bought it, for how much, and when. The title transfers ownership; the bill of sale documents the transaction and supports registration.
Yes. Once both parties sign, a bill of sale is a legally binding record of the transaction and its terms. It can be used as evidence of the sale, the price, and conditions like "as-is." It does not need to be notarized to be binding unless your state specifically requires it.
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