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Mighty Little Blue

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His title should come with a release signature from the lender. Maybe he was talking about going to his DMV and having a new title issued in his name only removing the lien holders name. Which the release signature would do without added expense.
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got3fords

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His title should come with a release signature from the lender. Maybe he was talking about going to his DMV and having a new title issued in his name only removing the lien holders name. Which the release signature would do without added expense.
Here is Duck.ai's response:
Who’s on the car title depends on how the loan and purchase were arranged:
  • If you bought the car and financed it in your name only: the title usually lists you as the owner and the lender as a lienholder (the lender’s name appears as lienholder until the loan is paid).
  • If you and someone else jointly bought/financed (e.g., spouse, partner, co-borrower): the title typically lists both owners’ names (and the lender as lienholder).
  • If the lender (or a dealer) placed the car in another person’s name (rare): that person will be the titled owner; the lienholder will still appear.
  • If the car is leased: the leasing company is the titled owner (not the lessee).
Not sure how my 5G loan was handled, it was through a local credit union. I did absolutely nothing when I made my last payment. Title showed up in the mail.
 
 








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