How to Get a Bonded Title in Texas

If you’re holding a vehicle without a clean title in Texas, a bonded title (also called a surety bond title) is the standard legal remedy. This process lets you establish documented legal ownership even when the original title chain is incomplete, the seller is unreachable, or the title was never issued.

Our downloadable guide walks you through the entire Texas process — every form, every fee, and every step — so you can complete it yourself without hiring an attorney.

📄 Texas Bonded Title DIY Guide — $29.98
Step-by-step PDF. Instant download. Everything you need for Texas's bonded title process.

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What You Need to Know First — Texas

Texas’s bonded title process (Form VTR-130-SOF) is administered by the Texas DMV and requires a TxDMV-assigned value — you cannot use NADA, KBB, or dealer appraisals. The TxDMV value must be obtained by submitting Form VTR-125 before your bond application. This two-step process is the most common source of delays for Texas applicants.

The Texas Bonded Title Process

File at your county tax assessor-collector’s office. Texas’s bond period is 3 years. VIN inspection by a Texas DPS officer is required.

Required Surety Bond Amount

Texas uses a bond formula of 1.5× the vehicle’s value as determined by the TxDMV. Your bond premium — the amount you actually pay to a surety company — is typically 1–3% of the bond amount per year. For example, if your vehicle is valued at $10,000 and the bond requirement is 1.5× value ($15,000 bond), you’d pay approximately $150–$450 per year in bond premiums.

The guide includes a step-by-step bond amount calculation worksheet and a list of licensed surety bond companies serving Texas.

Fees and Costs

Title fees are $33 plus applicable sales tax on the vehicle’s value. The VTR-125 value request is free but adds 1–2 weeks to the process.

These figures reflect the most recently published fee schedules. Our guide is updated annually each July to reflect any changes.

Timeline

Most applicants in Texas complete the bonded title process in approximately 7–12 weeks. The guide includes a checklist and timeline tracker so you know exactly where you are in the process at every step.

What’s in the Texas Guide?

The PDF includes four sections:

Section 1 — Overview: What a bonded title is, when you need one, and whether Texas’s bonded title process applies to your situation.

Section 2 — Step-by-Step Process: Every action in the correct order, from gathering documentation through receiving your Texas bonded title.

Section 3 — Checklist: A single-page checklist you can print and use to track your progress through the process.

Section 4 — Appendix: Direct links to all Texas DMV forms, fee schedules, surety bond companies, and applicable statutes — verified and current as of the guide’s publication date.

Frequently Asked Questions — Texas

Do I need an attorney to get a bonded title in Texas? For most straightforward cases, no. The bonded title process is an administrative procedure designed for self-filing. The guide provides everything you need to complete the application yourself.

Can I drive the vehicle while waiting for my bonded title? In most cases, yes — with a temporary registration or under specific conditions described in Section 2 of the guide. Texas’s specific rules on this are covered in detail.

What if someone challenges my bonded title later? The surety bond protects against this. If a prior legitimate owner files a claim during the bond period, the bonding company compensates them (up to the bond amount). Your guide explains how to build a strong documentation record that minimizes this risk.


Part of the Bonded Title DIY Guides — All 50 States series. Also available in the South Central Regional Bundle.

Get the Texas Guide — $29.98 →