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So I'm driving a vehicle owned by and making payments to my friend. I'd like to trade it in to get something in my name since my credit has drastically improved. A couple of dealers have turned me away saying I can't carry someone else's negative equity ($3400) into my new loan? A down payment of that much is not possible. I'm not understanding why this isn't possible since I'm basically agreeing to pay the loan and the bank would make interest of it anyway. Someone shed some light on this, please?
If the car is in your friends name you don't "own" it therefore it's not possible for you to trade it in.
I see two issues with the above described scenario,
A) Most captive lender's will not allow a "third-party" trade-in, meaning that they prohibit dealers from allowing a customer to trade-in a vehicle that is financed in someone else's name. If the vehicle is paid-for and has no lien, as long as the owner of the vehicle sign's off on the title it is okay, but not if there is a lien on the vehicle.
B) You would obviously have to have the person who own's the vehicle authorize you to trade it in and sign the title as seller, but if you look back at issue (A) if there is a lien on the vehicle in the owner's name, lender's prohibit this.
there's really no such thing as trading in a car..trading = selling the car to the dealer...you can't sell property you don't own.
A little clarification:
My friend is willingly going to sign over the vehicle to the dealership, I'm not trying to sell property without consent.
And I'm still not understanding why this isn't a thing because if these are indeed 2 transactions, can't they just increase the trade-in value and compensate it by adding the same amount to the purchase price (not to exceed LTV limits) of the new vehicle so on paper it's as if there isn't any negative equity being carried over? That's what I'm misunderstanding because my friend is willing to sign the documents at the dealer to get rid of this vehicle. I feel like I'm just getting a runaround at the dealers I go to because they don't want to structure the deal how I mentioned.
www.lightstream.com is your friend.
just give them $3400 of the proceeds and go buy a car with the rest.
In my original reply, I answered your question. Dealer's have Dealer agreement's with their lender's, in the dealer agreement lender's outline your situation and prohibit it. Dealer's are not allowed to take third party trades in which money is owed, if the vehicle was free-and-clear with no lien, they would be able to trade for it. But since there is a lien on the vehicle, they aren't allowed to trade for the vehicle since it is not in your name per their agreement with the lienholder's.
Dealer's know how to structure deal's in order to make a deal look better on paper, but this doesn't alleviate the fact that the trade-in has a lien on it.
@Anonymous wrote:So I'm driving a vehicle owned by and making payments to my friend. I'd like to trade it in to get something in my name since my credit has drastically improved. A couple of dealers have turned me away saying I can't carry someone else's negative equity ($3400) into my new loan? A down payment of that much is not possible. I'm not understanding why this isn't possible since I'm basically agreeing to pay the loan and the bank would make interest of it anyway. Someone shed some light on this, please?
I did not know this was a potential problem. I even mentioned the fact that a car I am looking to trade was in both my name and a parent's name to a salesman. I am looking to lease a car in just my name. It seems crazy to me that a dealer would not take a trade because there were two co-borrowers on the lien on that vehicle when both have signed off on trading it.
I heard back from a manager at a luxury franchise dealership in Illinois. Granted, I am talking about a lease here, but this is what they said, "All we would need is the non-purchasing co-buyer to sign a Power Of Attorney."