Warning: Buying a used car with an outstanding lien means you could inherit the previous owner's debt. The lender can legally repossess the vehicle from you — even though you paid for it. A PPSR search is the only way to protect yourself, and it costs under $15.
A lien is a legal claim against a vehicle used as collateral for a loan. When someone finances a car through a bank, credit union, or dealer, the lender registers a security interest (lien) against the vehicle's VIN in the provincial Personal Property Security Register (PPSR).
If the borrower sells the car without paying off the loan and the lien is not discharged, that lien follows the vehicle — not the person. The new owner can have the vehicle repossessed by the lender even if they paid the seller in full and in good faith.
The Personal Property Security Register (PPSR) is a provincial database where security interests in personal property — including vehicles — are registered. Every province in Canada has its own PPSR. When you do a VIN search on the PPSR, you can see if there are any active security registrations (liens) against the vehicle.
Note: PPSR searches are provincial, not national. A vehicle with an Ontario lien only appears in Ontario's PPSR. If you're buying a vehicle that may have been previously registered in another province, consider searching multiple provincial registries.
| Province | Registry Name | Cost (VIN search) | Where to Search |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ontario | PPSA / ServiceOntario | ~$10–$20 | serviceontario.ca |
| British Columbia | BC PPSA / OneStop | ~$8 | bcregistryservices.gov.bc.ca |
| Alberta | PPSA Alberta | ~$10 | alberta.ca |
| Quebec | RDPRM (Registre des droits personnels) | ~$7 | registrefoncier.gouv.qc.ca |
| Manitoba | PPR Manitoba | ~$10 | gov.mb.ca/ppr |
| Saskatchewan | SPPR | ~$10 | isc.ca |
Finding a lien does not necessarily mean you should walk away. There are legitimate scenarios where a vehicle has a lien:
Never complete a private sale when an active lien is registered without written confirmation from the lender that the lien will be discharged. Always get the discharge number.
Unlike buying from a dealer (where consumer protection laws apply), private sales in Canada are largely "as-is." The key legal protections are limited:
Your best protection is prevention: run the PPSR search, get CARFAX, and get a mechanical inspection before every private vehicle purchase.
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Get KOHO Free — Use Code 45ET55JSYALast updated: March 2025. PPSR search processes and fees vary by province. Always verify current procedures with your provincial registry.