Buying a Used Car — Private Sale Canada 2026

How to safely buy from a private seller: inspections, paperwork, taxes, and scam prevention

Buying a used car from a private seller in Canada typically saves you $2,000–$6,000 compared to equivalent dealer inventory — but it requires more due diligence. There's no warranty, no consumer protection legislation (in most provinces), and no recourse if the seller wasn't fully honest. This guide gives you a complete process to protect yourself through every step.

Step 1: Find and Vet the Listing

Most private car sales in Canada happen through Kijiji Autos, AutoTrader (private listings), Facebook Marketplace, and Craigslist. When evaluating a listing:

Common scams: "I'm overseas and will ship it to you" — always a scam. "I'll send a certified cheque for more than asking price" — scam. Selling on behalf of a deployed military member — scam. Never send an e-transfer or wire payment before physically seeing and verifying the vehicle.

Step 2: Vehicle History Report

Before viewing the car in person, run a vehicle history report using the VIN (visible through the windshield or in the listing). See our full guide: Vehicle History Reports Canada.

Key things to look for:

Step 3: In-Person Inspection

Step 4: Pre-Purchase Mechanical Inspection

A pre-purchase inspection (PPI) by an independent mechanic is one of the best $100–$200 you'll spend when buying a used car privately. Take the vehicle to a licensed mechanic (not the seller's preferred shop) for a full inspection. They'll put it on a lift, check the engine, transmission, brakes, suspension, steering, and fluid conditions.

Negotiating tip: If the inspection reveals $1,500 in needed repairs, you now have documented leverage to negotiate the price down by that amount. Many sellers will accept a reduction rather than lose the sale.

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Step 5: Negotiate the Price

Private sellers often have flexibility, especially if the vehicle has been listed for several weeks. Research comparable listings before negotiating. Fair opening offers are typically 5–10% below asking. Be polite and factual — reference specific issues found during inspection or comparable lower-priced listings.

Step 6: Bill of Sale

A bill of sale is required for private vehicle transfers in all Canadian provinces. It should include:

Most provincial MTO/Service BC/Service Alberta websites offer a free bill of sale template. Keep a signed copy — you'll need it to register the vehicle.

Step 7: Lien Check and Ownership Transfer

Before completing the transaction, confirm there's no lien registered against the vehicle. You can do a PPSA search at your provincial registry (typically $10–$25). If there is a lien, the loan must be paid off first — typically handled by the lender paying the bank directly and any remaining amount going to the seller.

To transfer ownership, visit your provincial registry office (ServiceOntario, ICBC, Registry Agent in Alberta, SAAQ in Quebec, etc.) with:

Private Sale Tax Rules by Province

ProvinceTax on Private SaleBasis
Ontario13% RST (Retail Sales Tax)Greater of sale price or Canadian Black Book value
BC12% PSTGreater of sale price or NADA/Canadian Black Book value
Alberta5% GSTSale price — private sales generally only trigger GST if seller is a GST registrant (rare)
Quebec9.975% QSTGreater of sale price or estimated value
Saskatchewan6% PSTGreater of sale price or approved value
Manitoba7% PSTSale price
Important: In Ontario and BC, even if you buy a car for below market value (e.g., a family member sells you a $15,000 car for $5,000), you'll pay tax on the Black Book value, not the sale price. Plan accordingly.

Frequently Asked Questions

What happens if a private seller lied about the car's condition?

In most Canadian provinces, private sales are "buyer beware" (caveat emptor). If the seller made a specific written or verbal misrepresentation (e.g., "this car has never been in an accident" — and it has), you may have grounds for a civil claim. Get all representations in writing. This is why an independent inspection is so important — it shifts risk to you knowingly, but also surfaces problems before purchase.

Do I need insurance before driving a purchased car home?

Yes — in all Canadian provinces, you must have valid insurance before driving. Contact your insurer before completing the purchase and have a binder number or policy in place.

See also: Vehicle History Reports | Car Buying Checklist | Used Car Financing | Car Tax by Province