Im buying a car with private plates..the owner wants to keep the plates.who has to re-plate it?? and at?
Answers:
he has to do it all for you, don't buy until it is done
call the dvla
its your car put your plates on it.. Ever hear of the DMV?
Will he not have kept the original plates, so you can just swap it back over with the DVLA?
you have to take the bill of sale to the local motor vehicle dpet and title the car in your name, pay all the taxes and they will issue you plates
a trip to your nearest dvla centre will sort this out in minutes but the seller is responsible for this
If he wants to keep his plates then you will have to buy new plates for it. You can do this by going to your local secertary of state office but be sure to bring the title to the car(make sure he has signed the title over to you and usually u have to enter how much you paid of the car on the title as well) Also make sure to bring proof of insurance and your drivers license as well because they will probably ask for all of it.
The original plates that were on the car before he put the private ones on still 'belong' to the car - unless they have been sold. At the moment the car is registered with the private plate - if he's not going to let you have it he needs to get car re-registered. If he hasn't already done that and you are buying the car tomorrow he will have to let you take the car with the private plate because that is the legal registration of the car. Best scenario is he sorts it all out before he sells it to you.
Current laws and I think they are in every state. You keep your tags. You either can take the tags off of one of your vehicles that you are no longer using and transfer it to the new car or if you do not have a tag at all from prevous vehicles then when you go to title the car at the tag office you purchase a new tag in your name.
You have to get your own registration and plate for your car! The seller is going to transfer his plate to another car. Typically the seller should be going to dmv with you to do the title work- it has to be notarized into your name so you can register and get your plate. Hope this helps
This chap should have arranged to get the plate off the car before selling it. He must get a form from the local DVLC and provide all the paperwork and they will then take the plate off this car and then issue the car with another reg number (possibly the one it originally had ). It is HIS responsibility to do this not yours.
Americans need not answer, this gent is from UK and they have very different laws on this.
No this is YOUR responsibility. YOU have to get the vehicle registered in your name, your insurance, and your own plate. Check your state's laws, but I'm pretty sure all 50 are the same.
It is the sellers responsibility to contact the DVLA and get the cars original plate reissued.
The seller is responsible and the fee is £80 as far as I know and he should pay this too. Frankly, it takes ages so he should have done this much earlier.
If he wants to retain his plates he will have to get them either transferred to another vehicle, or put them on a retention certificate at his own cost. When he does this the DVLA will issue a new registration for the vehicle (often the one that used to be on it) to reflect the year the car was put on the road.
Technically you are allowed to buy that car, but he should provide it an ID before selling it or the vehicle cannot be transferred from one person to another.
If he wants you to do this he will have to supply you with documents that give his private registration as the cars, therby making the plates he removed worthless to him and your property. If you then get new plates made up wth the same registration and fit them to the car, when it comes to who's responsible for identity theft he'd be responsible.
In fact I don't believe he can leave it with no ID at all, he should be given a new one for the car when he transfers the plates, which he will have to do at a DVLA office. If I were you I wouldn't buy the car with no ID, you may not be able to prove you bought it if you had to as the reciept will not correspond with the vehicle in question, same for tax, MOT, V5, your insurance etc.
If the current owner wants to keep the plates then they should have had the foresight to have changed them back before selling the vehicle.A call to the DVLA will give you all the info you need but bear in mind there will be a charge for changing reg plates and tax disc over. It can only be done at certain DVLA offices and in person.
Just ring the DVLA, they will be able to answer your questions regarding you car!
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