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Is there a difference between a car title and registration card?
Is there a difference between a car title and registration card?
8 Answers
- Anonymous1 decade agoFavorite Answer
A title certificate is just that: evidence of title. It's held by the owner of the car or by the lien holder if there is a loan outstanding. You wouldn't normally keep it in the car as you need it to sell. We keep ours in a safe deposit box with other important documents. When you sell the car, the motor vehicle department will send a new one to the buyer.
The registration card is issued by the State with your plates and is carried in the car to prove that it is validly registered. That's what the cop wants to see when you get bagged in a radar trap.
- Anonymous1 decade ago
The car title is the ownership paper of the car. There is only one, and owners change hands by successively entering names on the title as the car is resold.
The car registration is the annual tax you pay your state to drive the car on the roads. The tax helps to pay for road and bridge repair in most states. You must pay this fee every year. Here in Texas, you get a receipt, and a sticker for your car. The police will not ask to see the receipt, they just look for the sticker on your windshield, which has the expiration date on it.
Paying the registration fee will not convince the police you own the car. If they have a report of a stolen car, and pull you over, you better be able to prove you have "clear title" to the car by producing the title. Don't keep the title paper in your car though.
I hope this helps.
- Anonymous1 decade ago
The car title is generally a larger sheet of paper and contains vehicle information, owner information and when applicable, lienholder information. If the car is paid for, the title would be in the owner's possession and if not, the title would be in the lienholder's possession. The title proves ownership. After getting the title, you could park the car in a garage or a barn and never actually register it to drive on public roads.
The registration card is generally smaller and is usually on card stock or plastic. It also contains vehicle information and owner information, but it also has the tag information. To register the car, you need proof of ownership (the title), and in most states, proof of insurance, and in some states, proof of safety and/or emissions inspection. The registration (and tag that goes with it) are what allow you to drive the car on public roads.
- 1 decade ago
The registration is just a means of the government to keep track of taxing and issuing license plates.
The title keeps track of who really owns or has an interest in the car.
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- ?Lv 71 decade ago
Yes the car title proves that you are the owner and never changes until you sell the car or truck and the registration must be renewed yearly to obtain your license plates and pay property taxes if you have them in your state.
- xx_muggles_xxLv 61 decade ago
Yes, the registration is what you get with the sticker to renew the plates. The title Is a document stating who the owner or the vehicle is.
- Anonymous1 decade ago
A car title is the automotive equivalent to the formal deed to your house—the proof that you own that car. You only have ONE of them (and replacing a lost one is a pain in the tushy—you’ve got to go to a licensing bureau and pay for a re-issuance). You transfer your title if you sell or give the car to someone else, or if you move (with the car) to another state. The registration, on the other hand, actually goes along with your license plate—and it’s the annual check by the state (for which they so graciously allow you to pay) that says you’re still driving THAT car, still insured and by whom, and how much more decrepit your auto is, after another year (ie, how many miles you're driving. People actually used to get NEW PLATES every year with their registration—now, it’s new stickers—much cheaper to produce, change, and easier, by far, to mail.
- Anonymous1 decade ago
yes