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Sell a Deceased Owner's Car With No Title in Missouri

A calm, plain guide to selling an inherited Missouri car when the title is lost or still in the deceased owner's name. Get authority and a title you can sign first, then sell.

Selling a deceased owner’s car with no title in Missouri

In Missouri, the Missouri Department of Revenue (DOR), Motor Vehicle Bureau; Missouri does not run county DMV offices, so titling is processed at DOR contract license offices (fee offices) statewide or by mail to the Motor Vehicle Bureau in Jefferson City handles title work for an inherited car. Before you sell, make sure you have authority to act for the estate and a title you can sign. This page is general information, not legal advice; confirm the details with the Missouri Department of Revenue (DOR), Motor Vehicle Bureau; Missouri does not run county DMV offices, so titling is processed at DOR contract license offices (fee offices) statewide or by mail to the Motor Vehicle Bureau in Jefferson City before you sign or sell.

Getting a replacement Missouri title

If the title is lost, the person with authority orders a replacement using Application for Missouri Title and License (mark the DUPLICATE block) (Form 108) from the Missouri Department of Revenue (DOR), Motor Vehicle Bureau; Missouri does not run county DMV offices, so titling is processed at DOR contract license offices (fee offices) statewide or by mail to the Motor Vehicle Bureau in Jefferson City, fee $8.5. Open the Missouri form

Missouri also recognizes a small-estate path for modest estates. The threshold: No dollar cap on the surviving-spouse or unmarried-minor-child exempt-property transfer of one vehicle (Form 2305, RSMo 474.250), and the TOD-beneficiary (RSMo 301.681) and joint-ownership paths also avoid probate; the general small estate affidavit reaches a vehicle at $40,000 or less, 30-day wait (RSMo 473.097). When an estate qualifies, an heir can often move the car with a small-estate affidavit instead of probate, and the state then issues a clean title in the heir name.

For the exact Missouri forms, fees, and retitling steps, see your Missouri vehicle title transfer guide. Once the title is in your name or the estate name, you are ready to sell to a private buyer, a dealer, or an instant-offer service.

Missouri Department of Revenue (DOR), Motor Vehicle Bureau; Missouri does not run county DMV offices, so titling is processed at DOR contract license offices (fee offices) statewide or by mail to the Motor Vehicle Bureau in Jefferson City: https://dor.mo.gov/motor-vehicle/

Do these three things in order

The car cannot legally change hands until two things are true: someone has authority to act for the estate, and there is a valid title to sign over. Sell first and you risk an illegal “open title” sale that the buyer cannot register.

Step 1: Confirm you have legal authority to act

Figure out who is allowed to sign for the person who died. There are usually three paths:

  • Surviving spouse or joint owner. If the car was titled jointly with right of survivorship, a surviving co-owner can often retitle it with a death certificate alone.
  • Small-estate affidavit or affidavit of heirship. Many states let an heir collect a modest estate, including a vehicle, with a signed affidavit and a death certificate, no court case required.
  • Letters of administration or letters testamentary. If the estate goes through probate, the court names an executor or administrator and issues letters that prove authority.

Step 2: Get a title you can transfer

You cannot sign over a title you do not have. If the paper title is lost or still sits in the deceased owner name, fix that before any sale: order a duplicate (replacement) title from the Missouri Department of Revenue (DOR), Motor Vehicle Bureau; Missouri does not run county DMV offices, so titling is processed at DOR contract license offices (fee offices) statewide or by mail to the Motor Vehicle Bureau in Jefferson City, transfer the car through a small-estate affidavit where Missouri law allows, or, if the title is truly gone, apply for a bonded title backed by a surety bond.

Step 3: Then sell the car

With authority confirmed and a transferable title in hand, you can sell to a private buyer, trade it in at a dealer, or take an instant cash offer from an online or junk-car buyer. Sign the title exactly as Missouri instructs, record the odometer reading, and keep a copy of the signed title and bill of sale for the estate records. A reputable buyer will expect proof of authority and a title in your name or the estate name; no honest buyer asks you to sell a car you cannot legally sign over.

Three fixes cover almost every no-title sale. A duplicate title is a reissued copy of the lost title from the Missouri Department of Revenue (DOR), Motor Vehicle Bureau; Missouri does not run county DMV offices, so titling is processed at DOR contract license offices (fee offices) statewide or by mail to the Motor Vehicle Bureau in Jefferson City and is usually the cheapest fix. A small-estate affidavit lets an heir retitle the car without probate when the estate is under the Missouri limit. A bonded title, backed by a surety bond of about 1.5x the car’s value, establishes ownership when the title is truly gone (not every state offers it). Compare all the options, including title jumping and why to avoid it, in the national no-title guide.

Selling a low-value, non-running, or junk car fast

Once the legal pieces are in place, an old or non-running car does not have to linger. You can use an online instant-offer buyer, a junk or salvage yard, or a dealer trade-in. Call two or three for quotes, since offers vary.

With legal authority and a transferable title in hand, an online buyer can be the fastest way to sell a low-value or non-running car, often with free pickup and a quote in minutes.

Keep the death certificate, your authority document (affidavit or letters), and the signed-over title together until the sale clears. That paper trail protects you and the estate if anyone asks later.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you sell a car with no title after the owner dies in Missouri?
Not as-is. You first need legal authority over the estate and a transferable title in the right name. Order a duplicate title, transfer it with a small-estate affidavit, or apply for a bonded title, then sell.
How do you get a title for a deceased person's car in Missouri?
Apply to the Missouri Department of Revenue (DOR), Motor Vehicle Bureau; Missouri does not run county DMV offices, so titling is processed at DOR contract license offices (fee offices) statewide or by mail to the Motor Vehicle Bureau in Jefferson City with a certified death certificate plus proof of authority: a surviving-spouse affidavit, a small-estate affidavit, or court-issued letters of administration. If the paper title is lost, request a duplicate at the same time.
What is a bonded title?
A bonded title is a title backed by a surety bond, used when the original title is lost and ownership paperwork is incomplete. The bond is usually about 1.5 times the car's value and protects anyone with a future claim. Not every state offers them.
Can you junk a car without a title?
Often you still need proof of ownership. Some salvage yards accept a registration plus a death certificate and an affidavit, but most states require a title or bonded title. Confirm before you tow it.
Can you sell a car that is still in a deceased person's name?
Not until you move it into your name or the estate name. Selling while it still names the deceased owner, with the buyer left blank, is title jumping and is illegal. Retitle it first, then sell.
How long does it take to get a duplicate or bonded title?
A duplicate title often arrives within a couple of weeks. A bonded title takes longer because you buy the surety bond first, then file. Timelines vary by state and by mail volume.

Sources

Information current as of June 28, 2026

Settled Estate is not a law firm, and this content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Probate laws and procedures in Missouri can change. Consult with a qualified attorney for advice specific to your situation. Full disclaimer.

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