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How to Get a Title for an Abandoned or No-Title Vehicle: 50-State Guide

You found it in a barn, bought it at a swap meet, or it has been sitting on your property for years — but it has no title. This is the plain-English guide to getting an abandoned vehicle title — the legal ways to get one, what each costs and takes, and how the process works in your state.

Short answer: To title a vehicle you own but have no title for, you use one of three legal paths — a bonded (surety) title, a court-ordered title, or your state’s formal abandoned-vehicle process. For most people who bought, inherited, or were given a vehicle and simply lack the paperwork, a bonded title is the correct and fastest route. The official “abandoned vehicle” process is usually reserved for property owners, tow operators, and law enforcement claiming a vehicle that isn’t theirs — not someone who needs the title to a car they already have.

For an average vehicle, expect roughly $100–$400 in bond premium and state fees, with a title in hand in about 2–8 weeks depending on your state and path.

First — which situation are you actually in?

The right path depends on which of these you have. People lump them together, but they are different:

  • No title / lost title — you own or bought the vehicle, but the paper title is missing or was never transferred.
  • Abandoned vehicle — a vehicle left on property you control that you do not own and want to claim.
  • Mechanic’s or storage lien — a vehicle left with your shop or lot and never reclaimed.

Step 0 — make sure it is really title-less

  • Ask the previous owner for a duplicate. If you can reach them, a duplicate title from their state is the fastest, cheapest fix.
  • Run the VIN. An NMVTIS report shows the last state of title, any salvage or flood brands, and open liens.
  • Clear any lien. An unreleased lien must be resolved first — no path works around it.

The 5 legal paths to a title

1. Bonded (surety) title

The workhorse for “I own it, there is just no title.” You buy a surety bond (often 1.5× the vehicle’s value), the state issues a title branded “bonded,” and after a set period — commonly 3 years — with no ownership claims, the brand drops off. Cost is usually a small fraction of the bond face value, plus state title fees. Most states offer it; see the table below. How the Montana bonded title works →

2. Court-ordered title

You petition a local court for an order declaring you the legal owner, and the state titles the vehicle on that order. Common where bonded titles are not offered, or for higher-value or disputed vehicles.

3. Mechanic’s, storage, or repair lien

For shops and storage facilities: when a vehicle is left unclaimed past the statutory period, you follow your state’s lien-sale process (notice, waiting period, public sale) and title it through that sale.

4. State abandoned-vehicle process

For a vehicle abandoned on property you control, most states route the claim through law enforcement or a tow operator, with notice requirements and a waiting period. This is the path that varies most by state.

5. The Montana break/bond title

Montana issues a bonded title — commonly called a break/bond title — and lets non-residents title through a Montana LLC with a registered agent. That matters because more than a dozen states won’t issue a consumer bonded title at all (every “No” row in the table below), and others require an in-state VIN inspection you can’t do or drag the process out for months. The Montana break/bond route sidesteps all of that. Shelby & Sons prepares the entire package for owners in all 50 states — the surety bond, the VIN-inspection paperwork, proof of value, and the title application. One requirement to know up front: Montana requires a VIN inspection. For vehicles model year 2015 or older, that inspection can be done in your home state — the process is fully remote. For 2016 and newer vehicles, the vehicle must be brought to Montana for the inspection. Our break/bond processing fee is $600 (in addition to the surety bond and Montana fees), and most clients have plates and registration within 3–4 days and the title within 3–4 weeks. How the Montana break/bond title works →  |  Our title-recovery service →

How to file for an abandoned-vehicle (no-title) title, step by step

The forms change by state, but every legitimate path runs through the same five moves:

  1. Rule out the easy fix first. If you can reach the last owner, a duplicate title from their state is faster and cheaper than any of the paths below. Run the VIN through NMVTIS to confirm the last state of title, and clear any open lien — no path works around an unreleased lien.
  2. Figure out which path your state actually allows. Most states issue a bonded title; a number require a court order instead; a few use a specific affidavit or abandoned-vehicle route. Find your state in the table below.
  3. Establish the vehicle’s value and get any required VIN inspection. The value sets your bond amount (commonly 1.5× or 2× value), and many states require a law-enforcement or DMV VIN verification before they will issue a title.
  4. Buy the surety bond (bonded path) or file your petition (court path). A surety bond for a typical car costs around $100; a court filing adds a filing fee and, sometimes, an attorney.
  5. Submit the title application with your supporting documents and fees, then wait out any notice period. Bonded titles are usually issued in a few weeks; abandoned-vehicle and lien-sale routes add mandatory owner-notice windows of 30–60 days.

What it costs and how long it takes

Real ranges by path (an average passenger vehicle; your state and the vehicle’s value move these numbers):

Path Typical cost Typical timeline Best for
Bonded (surety) title $100–$400 (bond premium + title fees) 2–6 weeks You own the car but never got the title
Court-ordered title $150–$600+ (filing ± attorney) 1–3 months States with no bonded option; disputed or high-value vehicles
Mechanic’s / storage lien sale Notice + sale costs (varies) 30–90 days Repair shops & storage lots with unclaimed vehicles
State abandoned-vehicle process Low state fees 30–60+ days (notice periods) Property owners & tow operators claiming a vehicle
Montana break/bond (via LLC) $600 processing fee + surety bond + Montana fees Plates & registration in 3–4 days; title in 3–4 weeks Owners whose home state denies or delays a bonded title

Abandoned vehicle title requirements by state (50 states + DC)

Each state’s primary path, key form, and bond basis below — every row links to the official state DMV source. Availability and specifics change, so always confirm on the linked official page before you file.

State Bonded Title? How to Get a Title Bond Amount Official Source
Alabama Yes Bonded title (MVT-10-1A, MVT-10-1) 1.5× value official source ↗
Alaska Yes Bonded title 1.5× value official source ↗
Arizona Yes Bonded title 1.5× value official source ↗
Arkansas Yes Bonded title 1.5× value official source ↗
California Yes Bonded title (REG-256, REG-5057) 1.5× value official source ↗
Colorado Yes Bonded title (DR-2922, DR-2704) 2× value official source ↗
Connecticut Yes Bonded title 2× value official source ↗
Delaware No Court order (MV212, MV35) official source ↗
District of Columbia No Court order official source ↗
Florida Conditional Bonded title (HSMV-82033, HSMV-82026) 2× value official source ↗
Georgia Yes Bonded title (MV-1, MV-46) 2× value official source ↗
Hawaii Conditional Bonded title 1× retail value (county-set) official source ↗
Idaho Conditional Bonded title 1.5× value official source ↗
Illinois Conditional Bonded title (VSD-190) 1.5× value official source ↗
Indiana No Court order official source ↗
Iowa Yes Bonded title 1.5× value official source ↗
Kansas No Court order (TR-720B, TR-64) 1.5× value official source ↗
Kentucky No Court order (TC-96-182, TC-96-3) official source ↗
Louisiana No Court order official source ↗
Maine Yes Bonded title (MVT-18, MVT-8) 1.5× value official source ↗
Maryland Yes Bonded title 1.5× value official source ↗
Massachusetts Conditional Bonded title 1.5× value official source ↗
Michigan Yes Bonded title (TR-121, TR-205) 2× value official source ↗
Minnesota Yes Bonded title 1.5× value official source ↗
Mississippi Yes Bonded title 1.5× value official source ↗
Missouri Conditional Bonded title 2× value official source ↗
Montana Yes Bonded title (MV10, MV20) Bond amount equals the vehicle value official source ↗
Nebraska Yes Bonded title 1.5× value official source ↗
Nevada Yes Bonded title (VP-271, VP-272) 1.5× value official source ↗
New Hampshire Conditional Bonded title 1.5× value official source ↗
New Jersey No Improper Evidence of Ownership official source ↗
New Mexico Conditional Bonded title (MVD-10070, MVD-10861) 2× value official source ↗
New York Yes Bonded title (MV-994, MV-51B) 2× value official source ↗
North Carolina Conditional Bonded title 1.5× value official source ↗
North Dakota No Court order 1.5× value official source ↗
Ohio No Court order official source ↗
Oklahoma No Ownership affidavit (Form 753) official source ↗
Oregon No Ownership docs / Form 550 (no bond) official source ↗
Pennsylvania No Court order (MV-1) 1× value official source ↗
Rhode Island Conditional Bonded title (TR-2, TR-9) 1.5× value official source ↗
South Carolina No Magistrate order of sale (court route) official source ↗
South Dakota Conditional Bonded title Set by MVD valuation official source ↗
Tennessee Yes Bonded title 1.5× value official source ↗
Texas Yes Bonded title (VTR-130-SOF, VTR-130-ND) 1.5× value official source ↗
Utah Conditional Bonded title (TC-656, TC-569A) 2× value official source ↗
Vermont Yes Bonded title 1.5× value official source ↗
Virginia No Court order official source ↗
Washington Yes Bonded title 1.5× value (RCW 46.12.680) official source ↗
West Virginia No Court order (DMV-1-TR) official source ↗
Wisconsin Yes Bonded title (MV2082, MV1) 1.5× value official source ↗
Wyoming Yes Bonded title (MV-147, MV-220) 2× value official source ↗

Special cases & mistakes that get titles rejected

Classic and antique vehicles may title by year of manufacture and often need a VIN verification. No-VIN, homemade, or kit vehicles require a state-assigned VIN and inspection. Boats, trailers, and motorcycles usually use separate forms but the same bonded and court paths. And if the VIN shows a salvage or junk brand, bonding does not erase it — the brand follows the vehicle.

The fastest ways to get a title rejected: acting on an open title signed by someone outside the ownership chain (a title-washing red flag), ignoring an unreleased lien, a missing or mismatched VIN inspection, or undervaluing the vehicle on the bond.

No title? We handle it nationwide.

Shelby & Sons prepares the Montana break/bond title — surety bond, VIN-inspection paperwork, and title application — for owners in all 50 states, including the cases your home-state DMV won’t take.

Get Started →📞 406-616-2776

VIN-inspection note: vehicles 2015 & older can be inspected in your home state; 2016 & newer must be brought to Montana.

Frequently asked questions

How do you get a title for an abandoned vehicle? Identify which legal path your state allows — bonded title, court order, or the state abandoned-vehicle process — then submit that application with proof of the vehicle’s value, a VIN inspection if required, and the applicable bond or filing. For a vehicle you already possess and simply lack the title for, the bonded-title path is almost always the right one.

How much does it cost? For an average vehicle, a bonded title typically runs $100–$400 all-in (surety bond premium plus state title fees). Court-ordered titles cost more once you add filing fees and any legal help. Higher-value vehicles cost more because the bond is a multiple of the vehicle’s value.

How long does it take? Bonded titles are commonly issued within 2–6 weeks. Court orders take 1–3 months. The state abandoned-vehicle and lien-sale routes are slower because they include mandatory 30–60 day owner-notice periods.

Can I title a car that’s been abandoned on my property? Usually not by simply applying at the DMV. Most states route a genuinely abandoned vehicle through law enforcement or a licensed tow operator first, with notice to the registered owner and a waiting period, before ownership can transfer. Check your state’s row above for the specific process.

What if the previous owner shows up after I start? During the notice or bond-claim period the registered owner can step forward and reclaim the vehicle (you would typically be reimbursed for documented costs). After the bonded-title claim period passes with no valid claim — commonly three years — the brand drops off and your ownership is settled.

Do I need the old owner to sign anything? No — the bonded and court paths exist precisely because you cannot get the prior owner’s signature. That is the whole point of posting a bond or obtaining a court order in their place.

Can I get a title with just a bill of sale? A bill of sale alone is not a title, but it is important supporting evidence of how you acquired the vehicle. Most bonded-title applications ask for it; on its own it does not transfer legal title.

What about a vehicle with no VIN, or one with a salvage brand? A missing or homemade VIN requires a state-assigned VIN and inspection before titling. A salvage or junk brand on the VIN history follows the vehicle — bonding does not erase it, and the new title will carry the brand.

Is a bonded title a “real” title? Yes. It is a normal, fully usable title with a bond notation that drops off after the claim period (commonly three years). You can register, insure, drive, and sell the vehicle with it.

What is a break/bond title? It’s the common name for a Montana bonded title issued when no prior title exists. You post a surety bond for the vehicle’s value, Montana issues a title carrying a “bond” brand, and the brand drops off after three years with no valid ownership claim. Because Montana lets non-residents title through an LLC, it works even when your own state won’t issue a bonded title.

Do I have to bring my vehicle to Montana? It depends on the model year, because Montana requires a VIN inspection. For vehicles 2015 or older, the inspection can be completed in your home state, so the whole process is handled remotely. For 2016 and newer vehicles, the vehicle must be physically brought to Montana for the inspection.

What if my state won’t issue a bonded title? That is the most common reason owners use the Montana route — Montana issues bonded titles and allows titling through a Montana LLC with a registered agent, even for non-residents.

Can I do this if I don’t live in Montana? Yes — through a Montana LLC with a registered agent, which is how owners nationwide use the Montana process.

Related Montana Title & Registration Guides

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