How can I remove my name from a car loan?

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I financed a car, then my friend took over the payment. We went to the bank to transfer the car over to her, but I still had to be on the loan as a co-signer. Last year she was still paying on the car, but the title is in just her name. How can I take my name off of the loan?










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    up vote
    21
    down vote

    favorite
    1












    I financed a car, then my friend took over the payment. We went to the bank to transfer the car over to her, but I still had to be on the loan as a co-signer. Last year she was still paying on the car, but the title is in just her name. How can I take my name off of the loan?










    share|improve this question

























      up vote
      21
      down vote

      favorite
      1









      up vote
      21
      down vote

      favorite
      1






      1





      I financed a car, then my friend took over the payment. We went to the bank to transfer the car over to her, but I still had to be on the loan as a co-signer. Last year she was still paying on the car, but the title is in just her name. How can I take my name off of the loan?










      share|improve this question















      I financed a car, then my friend took over the payment. We went to the bank to transfer the car over to her, but I still had to be on the loan as a co-signer. Last year she was still paying on the car, but the title is in just her name. How can I take my name off of the loan?







      united-states auto-loan co-sign






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      edited Dec 5 at 17:11









      donjuedo

      1987




      1987










      asked Dec 4 at 14:36









      Stephanie

      11213




      11213




















          4 Answers
          4






          active

          oldest

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          up vote
          68
          down vote













          In effect to get someone off the loan they would have to refinance the loan as the sole person on the loan, which once again depends on their credit. In other words, if their creditworthiness remains bad they would need another co-signer, otherwise they can't refinance and the situation remains the same. Sometimes the institution holding the loan would allow someone to assume the loan, but this depends on (1) whether the institution will allow this and (2) the persons creditworthiness, again.



          The bottom line is this was not a good call to make. Don't be an agreeable person just because someone you're friends with is in a tight spot. The only person financially responsible for you in the end is you, so you don't want to make yourself liable for someone who can't afford to finance a car on their own. It's a potentially kind, even positive gesture if your friend does the right thing, but all things held equal these sorts of transactions are often a mistake, and people pay for it down the line.






          share|improve this answer





























            up vote
            33
            down vote













            If you were allowed to "simply" take your name off of a loan because you didn't want to be on the hook in case your friend failed their payments then that would mean that the bank would have to immediately repossess the asset tied to the loan since your friend's credit is not good enough.



            They only approved the loan because you provided in writing:




            I am 100% liable for re-payment of this loan. Please seek me out in the event that you are not getting your money.




            So since they would no longer have legal route in theory then they cannot trust your friend today the same way that they didn't trust them previously.






            share|improve this answer
















            • 8




              @Joshua to which the bank's lawyers will reply "That's not how it works - you are liable for the loan. Pay us."
              – Bilkokuya
              Dec 6 at 13:46






            • 1




              @Joshua they will take and sell the car for sure. But you'll still have to pay off the entire loan
              – user73687
              Dec 6 at 16:05






            • 2




              @Joshua I wish I could make up my own laws and make everyone obey them too. But, I cannot. And you cannot, either.
              – only_pro
              Dec 6 at 21:06






            • 1




              @only_pro: This might one might boil down to what a jury will believe is right.
              – Joshua
              Dec 6 at 21:09






            • 3




              @Joshua Certainly not. Stop kidding yourself. This would never even make it anywhere close to court.
              – only_pro
              Dec 6 at 21:09


















            up vote
            13
            down vote













            You can't just "take your name off the loan". The reason why banks require a co-signer is because the person applying for the loan doesn't have good enough credit, i.e. the bank is afraid that they won't keep up the payments. If you could just take your name off the loan, then the whole point of having a co-signer, from the banks point of view, would evaporate: You could co-sign so your friend or relative can get the loan, then a year later -- or a day later -- take your name off and the bank is vulnerable to the primary signer not being able and willing to pay.



            If your friend is now able to qualify for a loan on her own, she could refinance under just her own name. Besides that, I don't know any way out of this for you. I'm sorry, I wish I had some easy answer, "just file form X-27B and you're free of this obligation", but I don't think there is any answer like that.






            share|improve this answer



























              up vote
              7
              down vote













              By helping your friend get the loan you have put yourself in a situation described here: you're still responsible for paying off the loan if your friend defaults, but you cannot get the car from her in case she stops paying. Actually, your situation is even worse since you're not even on the title after transferring the car to your friend, but that doesn't really matter.



              Not much to do now other than to hope that your friend will be able to pay the car off without getting any money out of your pocket.






              share|improve this answer


















              • 11




                Being a co-signer and not being named in the car title is one step behind (and probably worse than) gifting the car to the friend. If friend defaults, you lose the money, the car and the friend.
                – Mindwin
                Dec 5 at 16:45









              protected by Chris W. Rea Dec 9 at 20:47



              Thank you for your interest in this question.
              Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



              Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?














              4 Answers
              4






              active

              oldest

              votes








              4 Answers
              4






              active

              oldest

              votes









              active

              oldest

              votes






              active

              oldest

              votes








              up vote
              68
              down vote













              In effect to get someone off the loan they would have to refinance the loan as the sole person on the loan, which once again depends on their credit. In other words, if their creditworthiness remains bad they would need another co-signer, otherwise they can't refinance and the situation remains the same. Sometimes the institution holding the loan would allow someone to assume the loan, but this depends on (1) whether the institution will allow this and (2) the persons creditworthiness, again.



              The bottom line is this was not a good call to make. Don't be an agreeable person just because someone you're friends with is in a tight spot. The only person financially responsible for you in the end is you, so you don't want to make yourself liable for someone who can't afford to finance a car on their own. It's a potentially kind, even positive gesture if your friend does the right thing, but all things held equal these sorts of transactions are often a mistake, and people pay for it down the line.






              share|improve this answer


























                up vote
                68
                down vote













                In effect to get someone off the loan they would have to refinance the loan as the sole person on the loan, which once again depends on their credit. In other words, if their creditworthiness remains bad they would need another co-signer, otherwise they can't refinance and the situation remains the same. Sometimes the institution holding the loan would allow someone to assume the loan, but this depends on (1) whether the institution will allow this and (2) the persons creditworthiness, again.



                The bottom line is this was not a good call to make. Don't be an agreeable person just because someone you're friends with is in a tight spot. The only person financially responsible for you in the end is you, so you don't want to make yourself liable for someone who can't afford to finance a car on their own. It's a potentially kind, even positive gesture if your friend does the right thing, but all things held equal these sorts of transactions are often a mistake, and people pay for it down the line.






                share|improve this answer
























                  up vote
                  68
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  68
                  down vote









                  In effect to get someone off the loan they would have to refinance the loan as the sole person on the loan, which once again depends on their credit. In other words, if their creditworthiness remains bad they would need another co-signer, otherwise they can't refinance and the situation remains the same. Sometimes the institution holding the loan would allow someone to assume the loan, but this depends on (1) whether the institution will allow this and (2) the persons creditworthiness, again.



                  The bottom line is this was not a good call to make. Don't be an agreeable person just because someone you're friends with is in a tight spot. The only person financially responsible for you in the end is you, so you don't want to make yourself liable for someone who can't afford to finance a car on their own. It's a potentially kind, even positive gesture if your friend does the right thing, but all things held equal these sorts of transactions are often a mistake, and people pay for it down the line.






                  share|improve this answer














                  In effect to get someone off the loan they would have to refinance the loan as the sole person on the loan, which once again depends on their credit. In other words, if their creditworthiness remains bad they would need another co-signer, otherwise they can't refinance and the situation remains the same. Sometimes the institution holding the loan would allow someone to assume the loan, but this depends on (1) whether the institution will allow this and (2) the persons creditworthiness, again.



                  The bottom line is this was not a good call to make. Don't be an agreeable person just because someone you're friends with is in a tight spot. The only person financially responsible for you in the end is you, so you don't want to make yourself liable for someone who can't afford to finance a car on their own. It's a potentially kind, even positive gesture if your friend does the right thing, but all things held equal these sorts of transactions are often a mistake, and people pay for it down the line.







                  share|improve this answer














                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer








                  edited Dec 4 at 20:04

























                  answered Dec 4 at 14:40









                  CKM

                  848311




                  848311






















                      up vote
                      33
                      down vote













                      If you were allowed to "simply" take your name off of a loan because you didn't want to be on the hook in case your friend failed their payments then that would mean that the bank would have to immediately repossess the asset tied to the loan since your friend's credit is not good enough.



                      They only approved the loan because you provided in writing:




                      I am 100% liable for re-payment of this loan. Please seek me out in the event that you are not getting your money.




                      So since they would no longer have legal route in theory then they cannot trust your friend today the same way that they didn't trust them previously.






                      share|improve this answer
















                      • 8




                        @Joshua to which the bank's lawyers will reply "That's not how it works - you are liable for the loan. Pay us."
                        – Bilkokuya
                        Dec 6 at 13:46






                      • 1




                        @Joshua they will take and sell the car for sure. But you'll still have to pay off the entire loan
                        – user73687
                        Dec 6 at 16:05






                      • 2




                        @Joshua I wish I could make up my own laws and make everyone obey them too. But, I cannot. And you cannot, either.
                        – only_pro
                        Dec 6 at 21:06






                      • 1




                        @only_pro: This might one might boil down to what a jury will believe is right.
                        – Joshua
                        Dec 6 at 21:09






                      • 3




                        @Joshua Certainly not. Stop kidding yourself. This would never even make it anywhere close to court.
                        – only_pro
                        Dec 6 at 21:09















                      up vote
                      33
                      down vote













                      If you were allowed to "simply" take your name off of a loan because you didn't want to be on the hook in case your friend failed their payments then that would mean that the bank would have to immediately repossess the asset tied to the loan since your friend's credit is not good enough.



                      They only approved the loan because you provided in writing:




                      I am 100% liable for re-payment of this loan. Please seek me out in the event that you are not getting your money.




                      So since they would no longer have legal route in theory then they cannot trust your friend today the same way that they didn't trust them previously.






                      share|improve this answer
















                      • 8




                        @Joshua to which the bank's lawyers will reply "That's not how it works - you are liable for the loan. Pay us."
                        – Bilkokuya
                        Dec 6 at 13:46






                      • 1




                        @Joshua they will take and sell the car for sure. But you'll still have to pay off the entire loan
                        – user73687
                        Dec 6 at 16:05






                      • 2




                        @Joshua I wish I could make up my own laws and make everyone obey them too. But, I cannot. And you cannot, either.
                        – only_pro
                        Dec 6 at 21:06






                      • 1




                        @only_pro: This might one might boil down to what a jury will believe is right.
                        – Joshua
                        Dec 6 at 21:09






                      • 3




                        @Joshua Certainly not. Stop kidding yourself. This would never even make it anywhere close to court.
                        – only_pro
                        Dec 6 at 21:09













                      up vote
                      33
                      down vote










                      up vote
                      33
                      down vote









                      If you were allowed to "simply" take your name off of a loan because you didn't want to be on the hook in case your friend failed their payments then that would mean that the bank would have to immediately repossess the asset tied to the loan since your friend's credit is not good enough.



                      They only approved the loan because you provided in writing:




                      I am 100% liable for re-payment of this loan. Please seek me out in the event that you are not getting your money.




                      So since they would no longer have legal route in theory then they cannot trust your friend today the same way that they didn't trust them previously.






                      share|improve this answer












                      If you were allowed to "simply" take your name off of a loan because you didn't want to be on the hook in case your friend failed their payments then that would mean that the bank would have to immediately repossess the asset tied to the loan since your friend's credit is not good enough.



                      They only approved the loan because you provided in writing:




                      I am 100% liable for re-payment of this loan. Please seek me out in the event that you are not getting your money.




                      So since they would no longer have legal route in theory then they cannot trust your friend today the same way that they didn't trust them previously.







                      share|improve this answer












                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer










                      answered Dec 4 at 20:04









                      MonkeyZeus

                      1,56111023




                      1,56111023







                      • 8




                        @Joshua to which the bank's lawyers will reply "That's not how it works - you are liable for the loan. Pay us."
                        – Bilkokuya
                        Dec 6 at 13:46






                      • 1




                        @Joshua they will take and sell the car for sure. But you'll still have to pay off the entire loan
                        – user73687
                        Dec 6 at 16:05






                      • 2




                        @Joshua I wish I could make up my own laws and make everyone obey them too. But, I cannot. And you cannot, either.
                        – only_pro
                        Dec 6 at 21:06






                      • 1




                        @only_pro: This might one might boil down to what a jury will believe is right.
                        – Joshua
                        Dec 6 at 21:09






                      • 3




                        @Joshua Certainly not. Stop kidding yourself. This would never even make it anywhere close to court.
                        – only_pro
                        Dec 6 at 21:09













                      • 8




                        @Joshua to which the bank's lawyers will reply "That's not how it works - you are liable for the loan. Pay us."
                        – Bilkokuya
                        Dec 6 at 13:46






                      • 1




                        @Joshua they will take and sell the car for sure. But you'll still have to pay off the entire loan
                        – user73687
                        Dec 6 at 16:05






                      • 2




                        @Joshua I wish I could make up my own laws and make everyone obey them too. But, I cannot. And you cannot, either.
                        – only_pro
                        Dec 6 at 21:06






                      • 1




                        @only_pro: This might one might boil down to what a jury will believe is right.
                        – Joshua
                        Dec 6 at 21:09






                      • 3




                        @Joshua Certainly not. Stop kidding yourself. This would never even make it anywhere close to court.
                        – only_pro
                        Dec 6 at 21:09








                      8




                      8




                      @Joshua to which the bank's lawyers will reply "That's not how it works - you are liable for the loan. Pay us."
                      – Bilkokuya
                      Dec 6 at 13:46




                      @Joshua to which the bank's lawyers will reply "That's not how it works - you are liable for the loan. Pay us."
                      – Bilkokuya
                      Dec 6 at 13:46




                      1




                      1




                      @Joshua they will take and sell the car for sure. But you'll still have to pay off the entire loan
                      – user73687
                      Dec 6 at 16:05




                      @Joshua they will take and sell the car for sure. But you'll still have to pay off the entire loan
                      – user73687
                      Dec 6 at 16:05




                      2




                      2




                      @Joshua I wish I could make up my own laws and make everyone obey them too. But, I cannot. And you cannot, either.
                      – only_pro
                      Dec 6 at 21:06




                      @Joshua I wish I could make up my own laws and make everyone obey them too. But, I cannot. And you cannot, either.
                      – only_pro
                      Dec 6 at 21:06




                      1




                      1




                      @only_pro: This might one might boil down to what a jury will believe is right.
                      – Joshua
                      Dec 6 at 21:09




                      @only_pro: This might one might boil down to what a jury will believe is right.
                      – Joshua
                      Dec 6 at 21:09




                      3




                      3




                      @Joshua Certainly not. Stop kidding yourself. This would never even make it anywhere close to court.
                      – only_pro
                      Dec 6 at 21:09





                      @Joshua Certainly not. Stop kidding yourself. This would never even make it anywhere close to court.
                      – only_pro
                      Dec 6 at 21:09











                      up vote
                      13
                      down vote













                      You can't just "take your name off the loan". The reason why banks require a co-signer is because the person applying for the loan doesn't have good enough credit, i.e. the bank is afraid that they won't keep up the payments. If you could just take your name off the loan, then the whole point of having a co-signer, from the banks point of view, would evaporate: You could co-sign so your friend or relative can get the loan, then a year later -- or a day later -- take your name off and the bank is vulnerable to the primary signer not being able and willing to pay.



                      If your friend is now able to qualify for a loan on her own, she could refinance under just her own name. Besides that, I don't know any way out of this for you. I'm sorry, I wish I had some easy answer, "just file form X-27B and you're free of this obligation", but I don't think there is any answer like that.






                      share|improve this answer
























                        up vote
                        13
                        down vote













                        You can't just "take your name off the loan". The reason why banks require a co-signer is because the person applying for the loan doesn't have good enough credit, i.e. the bank is afraid that they won't keep up the payments. If you could just take your name off the loan, then the whole point of having a co-signer, from the banks point of view, would evaporate: You could co-sign so your friend or relative can get the loan, then a year later -- or a day later -- take your name off and the bank is vulnerable to the primary signer not being able and willing to pay.



                        If your friend is now able to qualify for a loan on her own, she could refinance under just her own name. Besides that, I don't know any way out of this for you. I'm sorry, I wish I had some easy answer, "just file form X-27B and you're free of this obligation", but I don't think there is any answer like that.






                        share|improve this answer






















                          up vote
                          13
                          down vote










                          up vote
                          13
                          down vote









                          You can't just "take your name off the loan". The reason why banks require a co-signer is because the person applying for the loan doesn't have good enough credit, i.e. the bank is afraid that they won't keep up the payments. If you could just take your name off the loan, then the whole point of having a co-signer, from the banks point of view, would evaporate: You could co-sign so your friend or relative can get the loan, then a year later -- or a day later -- take your name off and the bank is vulnerable to the primary signer not being able and willing to pay.



                          If your friend is now able to qualify for a loan on her own, she could refinance under just her own name. Besides that, I don't know any way out of this for you. I'm sorry, I wish I had some easy answer, "just file form X-27B and you're free of this obligation", but I don't think there is any answer like that.






                          share|improve this answer












                          You can't just "take your name off the loan". The reason why banks require a co-signer is because the person applying for the loan doesn't have good enough credit, i.e. the bank is afraid that they won't keep up the payments. If you could just take your name off the loan, then the whole point of having a co-signer, from the banks point of view, would evaporate: You could co-sign so your friend or relative can get the loan, then a year later -- or a day later -- take your name off and the bank is vulnerable to the primary signer not being able and willing to pay.



                          If your friend is now able to qualify for a loan on her own, she could refinance under just her own name. Besides that, I don't know any way out of this for you. I'm sorry, I wish I had some easy answer, "just file form X-27B and you're free of this obligation", but I don't think there is any answer like that.







                          share|improve this answer












                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer










                          answered Dec 4 at 18:54









                          Jay

                          15.9k1955




                          15.9k1955




















                              up vote
                              7
                              down vote













                              By helping your friend get the loan you have put yourself in a situation described here: you're still responsible for paying off the loan if your friend defaults, but you cannot get the car from her in case she stops paying. Actually, your situation is even worse since you're not even on the title after transferring the car to your friend, but that doesn't really matter.



                              Not much to do now other than to hope that your friend will be able to pay the car off without getting any money out of your pocket.






                              share|improve this answer


















                              • 11




                                Being a co-signer and not being named in the car title is one step behind (and probably worse than) gifting the car to the friend. If friend defaults, you lose the money, the car and the friend.
                                – Mindwin
                                Dec 5 at 16:45














                              up vote
                              7
                              down vote













                              By helping your friend get the loan you have put yourself in a situation described here: you're still responsible for paying off the loan if your friend defaults, but you cannot get the car from her in case she stops paying. Actually, your situation is even worse since you're not even on the title after transferring the car to your friend, but that doesn't really matter.



                              Not much to do now other than to hope that your friend will be able to pay the car off without getting any money out of your pocket.






                              share|improve this answer


















                              • 11




                                Being a co-signer and not being named in the car title is one step behind (and probably worse than) gifting the car to the friend. If friend defaults, you lose the money, the car and the friend.
                                – Mindwin
                                Dec 5 at 16:45












                              up vote
                              7
                              down vote










                              up vote
                              7
                              down vote









                              By helping your friend get the loan you have put yourself in a situation described here: you're still responsible for paying off the loan if your friend defaults, but you cannot get the car from her in case she stops paying. Actually, your situation is even worse since you're not even on the title after transferring the car to your friend, but that doesn't really matter.



                              Not much to do now other than to hope that your friend will be able to pay the car off without getting any money out of your pocket.






                              share|improve this answer














                              By helping your friend get the loan you have put yourself in a situation described here: you're still responsible for paying off the loan if your friend defaults, but you cannot get the car from her in case she stops paying. Actually, your situation is even worse since you're not even on the title after transferring the car to your friend, but that doesn't really matter.



                              Not much to do now other than to hope that your friend will be able to pay the car off without getting any money out of your pocket.







                              share|improve this answer














                              share|improve this answer



                              share|improve this answer








                              edited Dec 5 at 14:18

























                              answered Dec 5 at 14:13









                              Dmitry Grigoryev

                              783314




                              783314







                              • 11




                                Being a co-signer and not being named in the car title is one step behind (and probably worse than) gifting the car to the friend. If friend defaults, you lose the money, the car and the friend.
                                – Mindwin
                                Dec 5 at 16:45












                              • 11




                                Being a co-signer and not being named in the car title is one step behind (and probably worse than) gifting the car to the friend. If friend defaults, you lose the money, the car and the friend.
                                – Mindwin
                                Dec 5 at 16:45







                              11




                              11




                              Being a co-signer and not being named in the car title is one step behind (and probably worse than) gifting the car to the friend. If friend defaults, you lose the money, the car and the friend.
                              – Mindwin
                              Dec 5 at 16:45




                              Being a co-signer and not being named in the car title is one step behind (and probably worse than) gifting the car to the friend. If friend defaults, you lose the money, the car and the friend.
                              – Mindwin
                              Dec 5 at 16:45





                              protected by Chris W. Rea Dec 9 at 20:47



                              Thank you for your interest in this question.
                              Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



                              Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?


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