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Automobile Purchase Agreement · Pennsylvania

Free Pennsylvania Automobile Purchase Agreement Forms

Create a Pennsylvania-compliant automobile purchase agreement with financing terms, trade-in provisions, warranty clauses, and lemon law protections. Unlike a bill of sale (which records a completed sale), this agreement establishes the conditions BEFORE the sale closes.

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Last updated February 28, 2026

Pennsylvania Automobile Purchase Agreement Overview

An automobile purchase agreement in Pennsylvania is a pre-sale contract that establishes all terms and conditions before the vehicle transaction closes. This is different from a bill of sale, which simply records a completed sale. The purchase agreement protects both parties by defining the price, financing, inspection contingencies, warranty terms, and conditions for closing.

Pennsylvania charges 6% sales tax on vehicles; Philadelphia (7%) and Allegheny County (8%) have higher rates. Pennsylvania's Lemon Law covers new vehicles within 1 year, 12,000 miles, or the manufacturer's express warranty.

6%

Sales tax

New vehicles

Lemon law

20 calendar

Transfer deadline

Annual

Emissions test

Pennsylvania Automobile Purchase Requirements

Title transfer must be completed within 20 calendar days.

Annual safety and emissions inspection is required statewide for all registered vehicles.

Purchase Agreement vs. Bill of Sale

An automobile purchase agreement is signed BEFORE the sale closes and establishes conditions (financing approval, inspection results, lien payoff). A bill of sale is signed AFTER/AT closing as a receipt. For complex transactions involving financing, trade-ins, or lien payoffs, a purchase agreement provides far more protection than a bill of sale alone.

What to Include in Your Pennsylvania Automobile Purchase Agreement

  • Vehicle Details: Year, make, model, VIN, mileage, color, and condition
  • Purchase Price & Payment: Agreed price, payment method, financing terms, and deposit amount
  • Trade-In: Trade-in vehicle details, agreed trade-in value, and lien payoff (if applicable)
  • Inspection Contingency: Buyer's right to have the vehicle inspected by a mechanic before closing
  • Warranty / As-Is: Whether any warranty applies or the vehicle is sold as-is

Key Provisions for Pennsylvania

Financing Terms

If the buyer is financing the purchase, the agreement should include a financing contingency allowing the buyer to cancel if they cannot obtain financing within a specified period. Include the anticipated loan amount, interest rate, and term.

Lemon Law Protection

New vehicles (within 1 year/12K miles — includes manufacturer warranty repairs). Pennsylvania's lemon law covers only new vehicles. For used vehicle purchases, include thorough inspection contingencies in your agreement.

VIN Verification & History

The agreement should require the seller to verify that the VIN matches all documents, disclose whether the vehicle has a salvage or rebuilt title, and allow the buyer to obtain a vehicle history report. This protects against odometer fraud, undisclosed accidents, and title washing.

Lien Payoff Process

If the seller has an outstanding loan on the vehicle, the agreement must address how the lien will be satisfied. Typically, the buyer's payment goes through escrow to pay off the lien first, with the remainder going to the seller. The seller must deliver a clean title within a specified timeframe.

Pennsylvania Automobile Purchase Agreement FAQ

Answers to common questions about automobile purchase agreements in Pennsylvania.

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