This is my kinda thing. I always buy private party, and I live in PA. Find a DOT notary. You can't use just any notary.
It's not a terrible thing, in fact I find it to be a nice, one-stop solution. Once you do all your negotiating and exchange handshakes and money, you find a local Automotive notary. Sollenbergers are big in the midstate, AAA office (only free if the buyer is a AAA member), or there are multiple other automotive notary services.
Before buying, I like to call my insurance company to get a quote first. Some of them have really odd pricing on vehicles that you wouldn't think were going to be expensive. You can't purchase insurance without a VIN, but it will give you an idea of what to expect. I also like to have the seller sign a bill of sale. PA uses a black book value to determine what you should pay in tax, so if you buy a Miata for $500, the state might send you a letter saying "hey, you're trying to cheat us cuz that car is worth 2000." Having a signed bill of sale gets you off that hook. That's only ever happened to me once, so no biggie. Don't sign the title yet, that has to be done in front of the notary.
Things you should take with you to the notary:
- ID (obviously)
- The seller (if you're buying in-state)
- The car (if it's out of state, or a certain weight class for trucks) for a VIN/GVWR verification
- proof of insurance. In PA, as long as you have liability insurance on another vehicle, you're covered for 30 days, so take your insurance card from another vehicle. If you don't have liability on anything, call your insurance company and they can get you something. IIRC, you give them something like $50 and they issue a card for liability insurance and then that $50 gets rolled into your first premium.
- take cash or checks just in case. PennDOT only accepts these two payment forms. It depends on the Notary whether or not they take plastic. Some notaries just accept your check written to PennDOT and courier it to them. Other notaries take money payable to the notary, then they write a check to PennDOT on your behalf. I think all Sollenbergers now do plastic as an option.
- That's it. They will hand you a registration and a license plate. I have (rarely) encountered some times when they are out of plate inventory and they'll give you a temp tag and then your plate will come in the mail. Whole process takes 15 minutes tops. The notaries are connected electronically to PennDOT, so it's all done. You now own the car.
If you're buying from out of state, you just have to gather some knowledge. The way it works is you have to follow the rules of the state. If the state where you purchase it requires notary for vehicle sales, you will basically do this process in that state first, then bring the notarized title to the PA notary. If you're buying from a non-notary state, you just bring the title signed by the seller.
Above all, just call your notary. Ask them what you need to bring them for a car purchased in [insert whatever state]. My most recent purchase was a van from NC. I sat down with the seller and a notary and notarized the title. I brought it back with me, Sollenberger's did a vin verification
I personally love the process in PA. You walk into an office where there might be one person in front of you, write one check for the tax, registration, and fees, and walk out 15 minutes later with a plate and registration. Title comes in the mail a few weeks later.