Ownership

Change of Ownership — Buying & Selling Paperwork

Two forms, a 21-day deadline, and one step the seller absolutely cannot skip. Get the change-of-ownership process right and the transfer is painless. Get it wrong and the seller keeps paying for a car they no longer own — or the buyer can't register at all.

Updated June 2026 9 min read Applies nationwide

The 30-second version

  • The seller completes the NCO form (the "yellow form") and submits it to their registering authority within 21 days — this is what removes them from liability.
  • The buyer completes the RLV form and registers the car in their name within 21 days, with the RC1, a valid roadworthy, ID and proof of address.
  • A roadworthy certificate is required, and outstanding fines must be cleared before the transfer goes through.
  • Sellers: get a stamped receipt for the NCO and cancel your insurance. Buyers: insure the car before you drive it.
  • If the car is financed, the bank holds the papers until it's settled — get a settlement letter first.

Transferring a vehicle into a new owner's name is governed by the National Road Traffic Act and recorded on eNaTIS. The process itself is straightforward, but the responsibilities are split between buyer and seller — and that's exactly where things go wrong. This guide separates the two roles clearly, flags the deadlines, and shows you how to avoid the disputes that drag on for months.

The documents and forms

Four things carry the whole process. Know these and the acronyms stop being intimidating:

The NCO and RLV are available at any registering authority or from the NaTIS website. Note that most post offices no longer process ownership transfers — go to a provincial licensing authority.

If you're selling: your steps

  1. Complete the NCO form togetherYou fill in your section; the buyer completes and signs theirs. Some authorities require it signed before a Commissioner of Oaths — police stations and post offices usually do this free.
  2. Hand over the documentsGive the buyer the original RC1, the roadworthy certificate, and a signed copy of the NCO.
  3. Submit the NCO to your registering authority within 21 daysThis is the step that legally removes the vehicle — and all future liability — from your name. Submit a copy of your ID with it.
  4. Get a stamped receiptKeep it. This is your proof that you notified the authority of the sale, even if the buyer is slow to register.
  5. Cancel your insuranceOnce the sale is done and the NCO is submitted, notify your insurer that the vehicle has changed hands.
Sellers — this is the one that matters If you don't submit the NCO, the car stays in your name on the system. Every traffic fine, e-toll, licence fee — and even liability for offences — keeps accruing against you, sometimes long after the buyer has driven off. Submitting the NCO and keeping the stamped receipt is your protection. Do not skip it, and don't assume the buyer will handle it.

If you're buying: your steps

  1. Make sure there's a valid roadworthyIf the current certificate is older than 60 days, a new one is needed before you can register. Agree upfront who pays for it.
  2. Complete the RLV formThis is your application to register and license the vehicle in your name.
  3. Go to a registering authority within 21 daysTake the signed NCO from the seller, the original RC1, your ID and a copy, proof of residential address, the roadworthy certificate, and payment.
  4. Pay the feesThe change-of-ownership/registration fee plus the annual licence fee — and any outstanding fines or arrears on the vehicle, which must be cleared before the transfer completes.
  5. Collect your new documentsThe authority issues a new RC1 and a new licence disc in your name. Straightforward transfers are often processed the same day.

What it costs

Two separate charges, plus anything outstanding on the car:

Confirm exact provincial fees with your registering authority before you go.

Before any money changes hands

The transfer admin assumes the car is clean to begin with. Protect yourself first:

Pre-transfer checklist

  • Is it financed? If there's a bank loan on the car, the bank is the titleholder and holds the papers until it's settled. Get a settlement letter and confirm the finance is cleared before you pay.
  • Any outstanding fines or arrears? They follow the vehicle and can block the transfer. Verify and resolve before registering.
  • Do the engine and VIN match the RC1? If the numbers don't match the registration certificate, the vehicle needs SAPS clearance — and it may be a sign of a cloned or stolen car.
  • Is the RC1 the original? You need the original registration certificate, not a copy. If the seller lost it, they must get a duplicate before the sale.
Verify before you buy Run a finance and identity check before handing over money. See our guides on checking outstanding finance, verifying a VIN, and police clearance & eNaTIS verification.

Common disputes — and how to avoid them

Frequently asked questions

What's the difference between the NCO and the RLV?+
The NCO (Notification of Change of Ownership) is the seller's form — it tells the authority the car has been sold and removes the seller from the record. The RLV (Application for Registration and Licensing) is the buyer's form — it registers the car in the buyer's name. Both are needed; one without the other leaves the transfer incomplete.
What happens if I miss the 21-day deadline?+
Late submissions attract penalties and arrears. For the buyer, registering late means extra fees; for the seller, failing to submit the NCO means the car — and its fines and fees — stays in your name. Aim to handle the paperwork within 21 days of the sale.
I sold my car months ago but I'm still getting fines. What now?+
This means the change of ownership was never completed in the system. Go to a registering authority with your stamped NCO receipt if you have it, or a sworn affidavit detailing the sale plus any evidence (sale agreement, deposit proof). The licensing officer can update the record. It's exactly why keeping that stamped receipt matters.
Who pays for the roadworthy — buyer or seller?+
The law requires a valid roadworthy for the transfer, but who pays is negotiable between the parties. Sort this out before agreeing the price. If the existing certificate is older than 60 days, a fresh test is needed.
Can I transfer a car that still has finance on it?+
Not until the finance is settled. While there's a loan, the bank is the registered titleholder and holds the papers. Get a settlement figure and letter from the bank, ensure the finance is cleared, and only then can the registration documents be released for the transfer.

Before you sign anything

The paperwork only protects you if the car is clean to start with. Run the full inspection and verification first.

See the 60-point inspection →

Forms, fees and procedures vary by province and change over time. This is general guidance for South African motorists as of June 2026, not legal advice or official confirmation. Always confirm the current process and fees with your provincial registering authority or NaTIS (natis.gov.za) before transacting.