Buying a Used Car in Georgia
Georgia issues an 'Unrebuildable' designation for vehicles too damaged to ever be re-titled for road use. For the roughly 11.0M residents of Georgia, buying a used car the right way means knowing the rules of the Georgia Department of Revenue Motor Vehicle Division, your rights under Georgia's lemon law, and verifying any vehicle's history with a VIN check before money changes hands.
Start with a Georgia VIN check
Before you put down a deposit on any used car in Georgia, run the VIN — a vehicle history report takes seconds and can save you thousands.
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How to Buy a Used Car in Georgia
This 2026 guide walks every step — from finding a vehicle and pulling a history report through completing the title transfer with the Georgia Department of Revenue Motor Vehicle Division. Start here.
Run the VIN first
Before any deposit, enter the 17-character VIN to surface Georgia title brands, accidents, salvage or flood damage, odometer issues, and open recalls — including out-of-state records the seller or local DMV may not show.
Inspect and negotiate
Inspect the car in daylight, get an independent Georgia mechanic to do a pre-purchase inspection, then negotiate using KBB and Edmunds private-party values against the condition and history report.
Title and register
Sign the title, complete a bill of sale, and submit it with your ID, proof of insurance, and sales tax to the Georgia Department of Revenue Motor Vehicle Division to complete the title transfer and registration.
Why Georgia Used Car Buyers Need to Be Extra Careful
With a population of about 11.0M and roughly 8.3M registered vehicles, Georgia has a deep used car market. That depth is good news for buyers shopping for choice, but it also means a constant churn of vehicles being bought, sold, and re-titled — sometimes across state lines, where damage and title brands can quietly disappear from local records.
Georgia issues an 'Unrebuildable' designation for vehicles too damaged to ever be re-titled for road use.That detail alone is a strong reason to pull a full VIN history report on any vehicle you're considering, rather than relying solely on what the seller or Georgia Department of Revenue Motor Vehicle Division record shows.
Buyers in Georgia should be especially alert for flood and hurricane damage that can be hidden under fresh detailing or a clean-looking interior.
GeorgiaTitle Brands You'll See on Vehicle History Reports
A title brand is a permanent notation that a state DMV adds to a vehicle's title to flag significant events — total losses, flood damage, manufacturer buybacks, and more. Georgia reports these brands to the National Motor Vehicle Title Information System (NMVTIS), which is what feeds most VIN-based vehicle history reports.
When a Georgia buyer pulls a VIN report, these are the title brands the Georgia Department of Revenue Motor Vehicle Division most commonly issues, along with what each one means in practice:
Salvage
Insurer declared the vehicle a total loss. Repairable, but value and insurability are reduced.
Rebuilt
Previously salvage; rebuilt and inspected back to roadworthy condition. Resale value remains lower.
Unrebuildable
Georgia-style permanent designation that the vehicle cannot be re-titled for road use.
Flood
Vehicle was submerged in water. Hidden electrical, transmission, and corrosion problems are common.
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Title brands, accidents, salvage, flood, odometer, and recalls — one report before you sign anything.
Georgia Department of Revenue Motor Vehicle Division Title Transfer Requirements
Once you and the seller agree on a price, the title transfer is the formal legal step that moves ownership to your name. In Georgia, the Georgia Department of Revenue Motor Vehicle Divisionprocesses title transfers, collects sales tax, and issues a new certificate of title in the buyer's name.
Most Georgia private-party used car transactions require the same core paperwork. Bring the following to your local Georgia Department of Revenue Motor Vehicle Division office (or your tag agent, depending on the county):
Title-transfer paperwork
- The original certificate of title, signed over to you by the seller
- A bill of sale showing purchase price and date
- The seller's current registration card
- Your valid government-issued photo ID
- Proof of Georgia auto insurance in your name
- Sales tax payment per Georgia Department of Revenue Motor Vehicle Division schedules
- A VIN inspection if the vehicle is from out of state or has a salvage history
- Odometer disclosure (federally required for vehicles under 20 model years old)
Time limits to complete the transfer vary, but most Georgia buyers should plan to title and register a newly purchased used car within 30 days to avoid late penalties.
Georgia Lemon Law Protections
Georgia's Lemon Law covers new vehicles within 24 months or 24,000 miles.
The Georgialemon law generally applies when a vehicle has a substantial defect that the manufacturer or dealer can't fix after a reasonable number of repair attempts, or when the vehicle has been out of service for repairs for a significant cumulative period. If those thresholds are met, qualifying buyers may be entitled to a refund, a comparable replacement vehicle, or other remedies.
To file a Georgia lemon law claim, document every repair visit (dates, mileage, written technician notes), keep all receipts, and notify the manufacturer in writing. A lemon check can also reveal whether a used vehicle has already been bought back as a lemon — a critical disclosure that not all sellers volunteer.
Sales Tax on Used Vehicles in Georgia
Georgia charges sales or use tax on used vehicle purchases, and the exact rate depends on your county and city. The Georgia Department of Revenue Motor Vehicle Division typically collects this tax at the time of titling and registration based on the actual purchase price shown on your bill of sale (or a fair market value floor if the price seems unrealistically low).
Because rates and exemptions can change, always confirm the current Georgia used vehicle sales tax rate on the official Georgia Department of Revenue Motor Vehicle Division website before you finalize a deal. Trade-in credits, family transfers, and gift transfers may reduce or eliminate tax in certain situations.
Pre-Purchase Checklist for Georgia Buyers
Use this checklist on every used car you're seriously considering in Georgia. Skipping any single item is how most buyers end up with a vehicle they regret.
- 1Run a VIN check before any test drive or deposit
- 2Verify the seller's name on their photo ID matches the name on the Georgia title
- 3Check for any open recalls at NHTSA.gov
- 4Inspect undercarriage and frame for rust — especially important on Georgia vehicles exposed to road salt or coastal air
- 5Confirm the odometer reading matches the title and the VIN history report
- 6Get a pre-purchase inspection from an independent Georgia mechanic
- 7Verify all keys, the spare, and any factory accessories are present
- 8Test all electrical systems: lights, infotainment, power windows, climate control, and warning indicators
- 9Cross-check the VIN on the dashboard, door jamb, engine bay, and title to make sure they all match
- 10Negotiate based on KBB and Edmunds private-party values, then verify clean history with a salvage title check and a stolen vehicle check
VIN Checks That Pair With This Georgia Guide
A history report is the single most important step before buying. These tools complete the picture.
Always check the VIN before you buy
Our free report reveals accidents, title brands, odometer rollback, theft records, and open recalls in seconds.
Buying a Used Car in Georgia — FAQ
The questions Georgia buyers ask most before they sign.
How do I buy a used car in Georgia?
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To buy a used car in Georgia, find a vehicle, run its 17-character VIN to check the history, inspect it in person or with a mechanic, agree on a price, then complete the title transfer and registration with the Georgia Department of Revenue Motor Vehicle Division. Bring the signed title, a bill of sale, your ID, proof of insurance, and any required tax payment to finish the deal.
How do I transfer a title in Georgia?
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In Georgia, the seller signs the certificate of title over to you and you submit it to the Georgia Department of Revenue Motor Vehicle Division along with a bill of sale, your photo ID, and proof of insurance. The state issues a new title in your name. Time limits and fees vary, so check the Georgia Department of Revenue Motor Vehicle Division for the exact deadline that applies to your purchase.
Do I pay sales tax on a used car in Georgia?
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Most states, including Georgia, charge sales or use tax on used-car purchases, and it is usually collected by the Georgia Department of Revenue Motor Vehicle Division at the time of title and registration. The rate and any local additions vary, so confirm Georgia's current rate with its DMV or revenue department. Trade-in credits, gifts, and family transfers may reduce or eliminate the tax owed.
Does Georgia require a safety or emissions inspection?
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Inspection and emissions requirements vary by state and sometimes by county, so verify whether Georgia requires one before you register. Where required, the check is typically tied to titling or registration through the Georgia Department of Revenue Motor Vehicle Division. A separate VIN inspection is also common when a vehicle comes from out of state or carries a salvage or rebuilt history.
How do I check a car's history before buying in Georgia?
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Enter the vehicle's 17-character VIN into a vehicle history report before you put down any money. For a Georgia purchase this surfaces title brands, reported accidents, salvage or flood damage, odometer discrepancies, and open recalls recorded in national databases — including out-of-state records the seller or local DMV may not show. Always match the VIN on the dashboard, door jamb, and title.
Do I need a bill of sale in Georgia?
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A bill of sale documents the purchase price, date, and both parties for a used-car sale, and Georgia generally expects one as part of the title-transfer paperwork submitted to the Georgia Department of Revenue Motor Vehicle Division. Even where it is not strictly required, keep a signed copy: it supports the sales-tax calculation and protects both buyer and seller if a dispute arises later.
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Pull a full vehicle history report before you sign anything — title brands, accidents, salvage, flood, odometer, and recalls in one place.
Buying a Used Car in Other States
Shopping a wider radius? See state-specific guides for nearby and popular markets.
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