Posted a used car for sale on craigslist last night. CL warns about fake cashier’s checks and other scams, but they don’t recommend any other methods of transferring payment between buyer and seller.
So what do you suggest? In the past four years I’ve sold a motorcycle and a car through craigslist; both were paid for with cashier’s checks, no problems.
Have you sold a used car yourself? What payment methods were you willing to accept?
Cash is king, especially on Craigslist. For a higher priced used car I’d probably take a cashier’s check or just a regular loan check from the bank if I went with the buyer and watched the bank issue the check. Fake cashier’s checks are very common.
Good luck faking one of those things. And it costs $2.50. If someone can’t spare that, they can’t afford your car anyway. I wouldn’t accept cash without a receipt. DO NOT.
Why not just ask the buyer to get cash from the bank teller while you’re standing next to him/her and then either walk away with the cash or, if you’re uncomfortable with that much cash, buy a cashier’s check yourself?
Many people do not have a bank, thus they deal in cash. Also, from the states I have been in you do not have to go to a bank to get a title notarized. I’ve actually seen a guys wife notarize a title since she was a notary.
The last time I needed something notarized, I asked at the bank but they didn’t have a notary on staff. (Fortunately, someone in my apartment building was a notary.)
Cash, preferably twenties. I’ve sold items in the 3 - 5 thousand dollar range and have requested cash. I’ve also had buyers who questioned cash and have explained I would accept nothing else.
I say this, or meet at the buyer’s bank and take the Cashier’s Check directly from the Cashier.
Last time I sold a car it was for only $650, so I didn’t fret about it too much. Not to mention the kid didn’t even take the car away after giving me the cash… which turned into a far longer story than “sold my junker for $650” should ever be.
If the buyer is taking out a loan to purchase the vehicle the bank will issue a check for the sale price. I bought a car a few months ago and then refinanced at a lower rate a couple weeks later. The bank that with whom I refinanced mailed me a check that I then mailed to the original lender.
I also just sold a car on CL a few months ago and I accepted cash from the buyer, but it was only $2500. We met at a mechanic shop to have the car inspected and when it checked out we went to a coffee shop down the street to complete the deal. He had a bank envelope with the cash that we both counted out. $6000 in cash would be pushing my comfort level, so I’d meet at the buyers bank where you can either take a freshly printed check or your bank where you can deposit the cash as soon as you receive it.
Also, in my state you normally have to notarize the title, but you can avoid it by actually going to the DMV with the buyer. This helps prevent one of the other pitfalls of selling a car, since you know the person actually transfered the title and you won’t start getting their parking tickets.
Because a stolen check can be stop-paid and reissued? Because if stolen, the thief can’t spend a check unless they break the law a 2nd time? Because checks written out to other people aren’t valid street currency in the US?
Echoing people who say to go to the buyer’s bank and have the teller hand you a cashier’s check, or go to a post office and have the buyer pay for money orders and the clerk to hand them to you. No theft risk, no fraud risk, and no reason a legitimate buyer would refuse.