Bill of Sale Check
Upload the seller's bill of sale before you pay.
Bill of Sale Check helps used-car buyers review VIN, mileage, title/lien proof, payment risk, signatures, sale terms, and missing paperwork before sending money.
What the review checks
- VIN, vehicle identity, and visible title/lien proof.
- Odometer reading and disclosure gaps.
- Sale price, payment method, buyer/seller details, addresses, and signatures.
- As-is or warranty language that may need to be fixed, verified, negotiated, or paused.
When this is useful
Use Bill of Sale Check before a private-party used-car payment, especially when the seller sends a handwritten bill of sale, a state DMV form, a marketplace template, or a phone photo of paperwork. The review is designed for the messy moment before money changes hands: the buyer has a document, a VIN, a price, and a seller story, but still needs to know what is missing or worth questioning.
The goal is not to replace the DMV, an attorney, a mechanic, or a full vehicle-history report. The goal is to make the bill of sale easier to read and turn visible paperwork problems into a short action list: fix this field, verify this claim, negotiate this risk, or pause before paying. That gives buyers a clearer record of what they asked the seller to correct before the sale moved forward.
Common issues buyers miss
- A VIN that is missing, shortened, mistyped, or inconsistent with the title.
- An odometer number without clear actual-mileage, not-actual, or exempt language.
- A seller name that does not match the title or lien-release paperwork.
- Payment terms that do not document the amount, method, timing, or receipt.
- As-is language that is vague, hidden, or contradicted by written promises.
Informational paperwork and transaction-risk guidance only. Bill of Sale Check is not a law firm, legal advice, attorney review, title insurance, title/lien verification, DMV/tax/title filing, a mechanic inspection, or a guarantee that a vehicle transaction is valid, safe, or complete.