Title Loan Statistics in Garden Grove, CA
$4,353
Average Title Loan in Garden Grove
$9,906
Average Vehicle Value
32
Loans Funded in 2025
43.9%
Average Loan-to-Value
Based on 32 title loans funded in 2025
Most Common Vehicles for Title Loans in Garden Grove, CA
| Vehicle Make | Avg. Year | Avg. Mileage | # of Loans |
|---|---|---|---|
| Honda | 2016 | 81,809 mi | 5 |
| Toyota | 2014 | 174,521 mi | 4 |
| GMC | 2012 | 66,150 mi | 3 |
| Lexus | 2014 | 97,245 mi | 3 |
| BMW | 2015 | 111,775 mi | 2 |
Recent Title Loans Funded in Garden Grove, CA
The table below shows actual title loans funded in Garden Grove, CA. Amounts vary based on each vehicle’s make, model, year, and condition.
| Year | Make | Model | Miles | Funded Amount |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2015 | BMW | 4-Series | 95,550 | $2,525 |
| 2010 | Lexus | ES 350 | 80,000 | $2,525 |
| 2017 | Dodge | Journey | 135,891 | $2,525 |
| 2023 | Lexus | IS 350 | 16,000 | $9,915 |
| 2017 | Acura | TLX | 9,900 | $3,175 |
| 2016 | Honda | Accord | 109,000 | $2,525 |
| 2016 | Nissan | Rogue | 120,000 | $3,515 |
Frequently Asked Questions About Title Loans in Garden Grove, CA
Yes. Garden Grove and the wider Little Saigon community have one of the largest Vietnamese American populations in the United States, and language access is a real concern here – especially for older first-generation residents. Our published materials are in English and Spanish, and we have Vietnamese-speaking staff. For Vietnamese (Tiếng Việt), bring a trusted family member or community advocate to translate during the application and disclosure review, or ask us to read aloud and explain key disclosures slowly.
Importantly, California Civil Code §1632 specifically requires translated written contracts for certain consumer loans negotiated primarily in Vietnamese (along with Spanish, Chinese, Tagalog, and Korean) – if your application is negotiated primarily in Vietnamese, you have a statutory right to a Vietnamese-translated copy of the loan contract before signing. Ask our Garden Grove office (12947 Brookhurst Way A) directly to invoke this right.
Self-employment from a Vietnamese American family business counts as verifiable income for California title loan ability-to-repay rules, but documentation looks different from W-2 employment. We accept: prior-year tax returns (Schedule C for sole proprietors, Schedule K-1 for partnerships and S-corps), 60–90 days of business and personal bank statements, business licensing and registration documents, and 1099s received from customers if applicable.
Two cautions common in Little Saigon family businesses: many businesses (particularly nail salons and food service) historically underreport cash income to minimize tax exposure – this works against you at our review because we use your reported tax income, not your actual income. And family businesses where multiple relatives share workload but only one is on the formal business filings can complicate documentation. Cleaner books, separate business and personal bank accounts, and consistent tax filing pay off when you need to borrow.
California Civil Code §1632 is one of the strongest consumer-protection statutes in the country for non-English speakers. The statute requires that for certain consumer contracts negotiated primarily in Spanish, Chinese, Tagalog, Vietnamese, or Korean, the lender must deliver a translated copy of the contract before signing. The protection applies whether negotiation was oral, written, or both.
Key practical points: the right to a translation must be invoked – ask explicitly; the translated contract should match the English version (any inconsistency should raise immediate questions); and if a lender refuses to provide a translation when the negotiation was conducted in Vietnamese, that may be grounds for the borrower to rescind the contract under §1632(k). Free consumer-rights guidance in Vietnamese is available through Asian Americans Advancing Justice – Orange County (213-977-7500) and the Legal Aid Society of Orange County.
The applicant on a California title loan must be the person on the vehicle title – not a family member who has the right to use the vehicle.
The title holder can apply for the loan in their name, with their income, regardless of who primarily drives the vehicle. The title can be transferred to a different family member through California DMV (a Statement of Facts/REG 256 form, an Application for Title/REG 343, and applicable fees – gift transfers between family members may be exempt from use tax under §6285 if properly documented). Joint titling adds both parties to the title and may allow either to apply, though policies on joint-title loans vary by lender.
Have a frank family conversation about who is the right applicant – often the answer is the highest-earning family member with consistent income documentation.