Legal documents · Bill of sale · Oregon

Oregon Bill of Sale Template

A bill of sale for personal property in Oregon records the transfer of ownership from seller to buyer. Oregon's rules differ from neighboring jurisdictions in specific, sometimes consequential ways.

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At a glance

Oregon requirements

Notary required
No
Witnesses required
No
Vehicle transfer form
Oregon DMV Bill of Sale 735-501
Last verified

Oregon has no sales tax; vehicle title transfers require form 735-501 but no notarization.

What a bill of sale does in Oregon

A bill of sale records the transfer of ownership of personal property — a car, a boat, a piece of equipment, livestock, sometimes a firearm — from one private party to another. In Oregon, the document acts as both a receipt for the buyer and a release of liability for the seller. Once signed, ownership has changed; the seller is no longer the legal owner and is no longer liable for what the buyer subsequently does with the item.

Oregon's position is that Oregon Revised Statutes § 803.094 governs the form and effect of these transfers. The bill of sale itself does not transfer title to a vehicle on its own — that requires the Oregon DMV to record the change of ownership using the Oregon DMV Bill of Sale 735-501.

What to include

  • date
  • seller name
  • buyer name
  • item description
  • price

For a vehicle, also include: vin, odometer, year, make, model.

How Oregon differs

Oregon has no sales tax; vehicle title transfers require form 735-501 but no notarization. For comparison, most US states do not require notarization, although having a notary or witness adds evidentiary weight if a dispute later arises.

Title transfer & registration in Oregon

A bill of sale documents the deal, but for a vehicle it is only one step in changing the registered owner. In Oregon, the general process runs in the same order: the seller signs over the certificate of title, both parties complete and sign the bill of sale (and Oregon DMV Bill of Sale 735-501, where Oregon provides an official form), and then the buyer submits the transfer and registers the vehicle.

The buyer takes the assigned title and bill of sale to your local Oregon DMV, applies for a new title in their own name, registers the vehicle, and pays the applicable titling and registration fees plus any tax due. Most states set a statutory window — often around a month — within which the buyer must complete the transfer, so file promptly to avoid late penalties. Confirm the current Oregon fees, deadlines, and form versions on the official DMV page before you go.

Notarization & witnesses

Oregon does not require the bill of sale to be notarized for a private vehicle sale. You can still choose to have it notarized at a bank, UPS Store, or law office — it is never wrong, and a notary's seal adds evidentiary weight if the transaction is ever questioned.

Sales & use tax

In the US, the buyer — not the seller — normally pays state and local use tax when they title and register the vehicle, and it is typically calculated on the purchase price. That is exactly why the price written on the bill of sale matters: your local Oregon DMV may use the stated figure (or a fair-market value) to assess what is owed. Record the real, agreed price honestly. As reflected in Oregon's own guidance above, this jurisdiction is among those without a general sales tax on the purchase, but registration and titling fees can still apply.

Keep a copy & dispute evidence

Both the buyer and the seller should keep a signed copy of the bill of sale — ideally each retaining an original, or a clear scan or photograph of the fully signed document. For the seller it proves the date ownership and liability passed; for the buyer it proves what was paid and on what terms. Store it together with any handover photographs and a note of the odometer reading at sale. If a dispute arises later, this contemporaneous paperwork is the most persuasive evidence either party can bring to Oregon's civil or small claims court.