Bill-of-sale law is fifty different things.
Pick your state to see required fields, notarization rules, conspicuous-disclosure standards, and what makes an as-is clause stick. Six states are live. The rest unlock as we expand coverage.
A vehicle bill of sale is only one part of a private-party used-car transfer. The buyer still needs to compare the seller's document against the title, odometer disclosure, lien release, registration or county-office instructions, payment receipt, and any state-specific form. This directory points buyers to the states where Bill of Sale Check already has a dedicated pre-payment checklist.
What state pages compare
Each live state guide explains the paperwork signals a buyer should verify before paying: whether a state form is commonly used, whether title transfer depends on a separate DMV or county-office document, how odometer disclosure fits into the transaction, and what kind of as-is or warranty wording should be easy to see.
The pages are informational, not legal advice. They are meant to help buyers ask better questions before payment, especially when a seller uses a generic bill of sale template or sends a document that does not clearly connect the VIN, seller, title, price, and payment terms.