How to title a hot rod

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(Texas)
(Texas)
Line 1,162: Line 1,162:
 
You can take the easy way out: buy a title.  Ads in some rodding magazines advertise titles for sale.  These titles are from cars that have been scrapped.  You can get just about any year and make you want.  I bought a 1923 Ford title for my bucket.  Take it to the DMV and turn it in and get a Texas title in your name, just like you would if you had bought any car with an out-of-state title.  You will have to declare how much you paid for the "car" you bought and pay the sales tax.  I paid $125 for the old title and so that's what I said.  I wouldn't venture the fact that all you bought was a title.  I honestly don't know if this is exactly legal, but it is a common practice.     
 
You can take the easy way out: buy a title.  Ads in some rodding magazines advertise titles for sale.  These titles are from cars that have been scrapped.  You can get just about any year and make you want.  I bought a 1923 Ford title for my bucket.  Take it to the DMV and turn it in and get a Texas title in your name, just like you would if you had bought any car with an out-of-state title.  You will have to declare how much you paid for the "car" you bought and pay the sales tax.  I paid $125 for the old title and so that's what I said.  I wouldn't venture the fact that all you bought was a title.  I honestly don't know if this is exactly legal, but it is a common practice.     
  
And if your car is 25 or more years old, you can get an "antique" license plate.  These are good for 5 years, cost  $70.00 and that is only if you say you bought the car for $1.00. I paid .06 cent on that dollar for sales tax so what ever you say that you buy it for you will pay .06 on the dollar for it on sales tax. Your car doesn't have to have safety inspections.  Per the law, your antique car is only to be driven to/from a show, or to have work done.  But I've never been stopped in 15 years, and you could always say you were going for an oil change or alignment, etc.
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And if your car is 25 or more years old, you can get an "antique" license plate.  These are good for 5 years, cost  $70.00 and that is only if you say you bought the car for $1.00. I paid .06 cent on that dollar for sales tax so what ever you say that you buy it for you will pay .06 on the dollar for it on sales tax over the $70.00. Your car doesn't have to have safety inspections.  Per the law, your antique car is only to be driven to/from a show, or to have work done.  But I've never been stopped in 15 years, and you could always say you were going for an oil change or alignment, etc.
  
 
The last option you have is if your vehicle has NO vin at all. This means no data plate, no frame number, or no original engine number. From what I have been told by the DPS up to 1954 all vehicles were registered with the motor number. GM vehicles did not have frame numbers until 1949, Ford had frames numbers from 1932. This also covers assembled vehicles using a manufactured prefabricated body.
 
The last option you have is if your vehicle has NO vin at all. This means no data plate, no frame number, or no original engine number. From what I have been told by the DPS up to 1954 all vehicles were registered with the motor number. GM vehicles did not have frame numbers until 1949, Ford had frames numbers from 1932. This also covers assembled vehicles using a manufactured prefabricated body.

Revision as of 17:06, 8 April 2010

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