Selling your car privately usually gets you a better price than trading it in, but it also puts you in charge of everything a dealer would normally handle: screening the buyer, taking payment safely, and making sure the sale is properly recorded so the car is no longer your legal or financial responsibility. Most private sales go smoothly, but a little caution at each stage protects you from wasted time, fake payments, and problems that can follow you long after the car has driven away.
Vetting the buyer before you meet
You don't need to interrogate anyone, but a few basic steps filter out most time-wasters and scammers before you ever hand over your keys.
- Talk on the phone first. Buyers who only communicate through text or email and refuse a call are a common red flag, especially for out-of-town "buyers" who claim they can't view the car in person.
- Be wary of overpayment stories. If someone offers to pay more than your asking price and send extra for a shipping agent, a friend, or anything else, stop the conversation. This is a classic scam regardless of what payment method they mention.
- Insist on an in-person viewing and test drive. Meet in a public, well-lit place — a shopping centre car park or a police station forecourt are popular choices in many areas — and ideally bring a friend along.
- Check they hold a valid driver's licence before letting anyone test drive the car, and consider photographing it for your own records.
- Trust your instincts. Pressure to decide immediately, reluctance to show ID, or a buyer who wants to meet very late at night are all reasons to slow down or walk away.
Getting paid without getting burned
Payment is where most private-sale scams actually happen, so this is worth taking slowly even if it feels awkward with a buyer standing in front of you.
- Cash is still the simplest option for lower-value cars, but count it together, in daylight, and consider verifying it isn't counterfeit if the amount is significant.
- Bank transfers are safer for larger amounts — but only once the money has actually cleared into your account, not just when the buyer shows you a payment confirmation screen or a transfer receipt. Screenshots and printed "proof of payment" documents can be faked. Log into your own banking app and confirm the funds are genuinely there before handing over the car and keys.
- Never release the car before funds clear, even for a buyer who seems friendly and trustworthy. If they push you to hand it over "while the transfer processes," treat that as a warning sign.
- Be cautious with cashier's or bank drafts. These can be forged, and a bank may not discover this for several days — well after the buyer and car are gone. If you're offered one, verify it directly with the issuing bank before completing the sale.
- Avoid being talked into installment arrangements with a stranger, or into accepting a lower deposit now with "the rest to follow." Get the full agreed amount before the car changes hands.
Paperwork that protects you both
A completed sale isn't just about getting paid — it's about creating a clear paper trail so there's no ambiguity later about who owned the car and when.
- Write a simple bill of sale or sales receipt noting both parties' names and addresses, the date, the price, the vehicle's identification details, and an odometer reading. Both of you should sign and keep a copy.
- Before the buyer drives away, photograph the car, its registration plate, and the odometer, and keep copies of any ID or documents the buyer showed you.
- Hand over service history, manuals, and both sets of keys as agreed, and note in your receipt what was included.
Cancelling your liability
The single biggest mistake sellers make is assuming the sale is finished once the money and keys have changed hands. Until the vehicle is officially re-registered or transferred out of your name with the relevant vehicle registry or motor authority, you may still be considered the legal owner — and in some places, liable for parking fines, tolls, or even more serious issues connected to the car.
- Notify the official vehicle registry or licensing authority immediately that you've sold the car, following whatever transfer-of-ownership process applies in your area.
- Cancel or transfer your insurance policy only after confirming the sale is complete, and check whether any refund is due for unused cover.
- Keep your bill of sale and any transfer confirmation permanently. If a dispute, fine, or claim ever surfaces later, this is your proof that you no longer owned or controlled the vehicle from that date.
- Follow up if you don't receive confirmation that the registration has changed within the expected timeframe. Don't assume the buyer has handled it — contact the registry yourself to check.
Selling privately rewards patience over speed. A buyer who's genuinely interested won't mind a public meeting place, a verified transfer, or a properly completed bill of sale — and taking these steps means that once the sale is done, it's truly done, with no surprises landing back on your doorstep.