Title Loan Statistics in Downey, CA
$4,280
Average Title Loan in Downey
$7,728
Average Vehicle Value
20
Loans Funded in 2025
55.4%
Average Loan-to-Value
Based on 20 title loans funded in 2025
Most Common Vehicles for Title Loans in Downey, CA
| Vehicle Make | Avg. Year | Avg. Mileage | # of Loans |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nissan | 2014 | 129,333 mi | 3 |
| Toyota | 2015 | 129,470 mi | 3 |
| Ford | 2012 | 149,798 mi | 2 |
| Chevrolet | 2015 | 125,000 mi | 2 |
| Honda | 2007 | 143,684 mi | 1 |
Recent Title Loans Funded in Downey, CA
The table below shows actual title loans funded in Downey, CA. Amounts vary based on each vehicle’s make, model, year, and condition.
| Year | Make | Model | Miles | Funded Amount |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2010 | Ford | F150 | 150,000 | $3,575 |
| 2019 | Nissan | Sentra | 110,000 | $2,615 |
| 2015 | Isuzu | N-Series | 272,633 | $6,015 |
| 2019 | Nissan | Sentra | 100,000 | $4,351 |
| 2014 | Freightliner | M2-106 | 242,635 | $7,215 |
| 2020 | Toyota | RAV4 | 52,409 | $2,525 |
| 2007 | Honda | CR-V | 143,684 | $3,221 |
Frequently Asked Questions About Title Loans in Downey, CA
Yes, and our Downey data confirms commercial vehicles fund here regularly: we recently funded a 2014 Freightliner M2-106 with 242,635 miles at $7,215, and a 2015 Isuzu N-Series box truck with 272,633 miles at $6,015. Commercial vehicle appraisal differs from passenger vehicle appraisal – maintenance records, engine hours, recent DOT inspection status, and current commercial registration all factor in, sometimes more than the odometer reading.
For owner-operators, your income documentation looks like a small business – 1099s, settlement statements from brokers or shippers, business bank statements showing freight payments, and tax returns. Two cautions: a CDL vehicle being repossessed eliminates your work tool simultaneously with defaulting on the loan; and many commercial vehicles also carry chattel loans (the original financing) that must be resolved before a title loan is possible with us.
Not directly. The vehicle title must be in the applicant’s name. Three paths to make it work.
First, the title holder can apply for the loan themselves and use the funds for whatever purpose – they’d need to qualify on income and meet the same documentation requirements. Second, you can transfer the title from your family member to yourself through California DMV (a Statement of Facts/REG 256 form, an Application for Title or Registration/REG 343, and applicable fees and use tax), then apply once the new title is in your name – typically 2–6 weeks, with a use tax assessment unless it qualifies as a family transfer exemption. Third, your family member can co-sign or be joint on the title with you, though policies on joint-title loans vary. The fastest legitimate path is usually the first.
Small business income counts as verifiable income for California title loan ability-to-repay rules. Acceptable documentation typically includes Schedule C from your most recent tax return, business bank statements (60–90 days), business licensing and registration documents, and 1099s received from customers or platforms.
Two cautions specific to small businesses common in Downey: many businesses underreport cash income to minimize tax exposure – that may feel rational at tax time but works against you at underwriting because we use what’s on the tax return, not what you actually earned. And many family-owned businesses commingle personal and business finances, which makes income verification harder. Cleaner books and separate bank accounts help significantly when you need to borrow. Spanish-language application support is available at our Downey office – request it directly.
Once the new California title is issued in your name (free of any prior liens), you can apply immediately. The DMV title transfer timeline varies – with all paperwork correct and submitted in person at a DMV office, you typically receive temporary documentation the same day and the physical title within 4–8 weeks.
We need proof of clear title in your name, which DMV interim paperwork may sometimes satisfy – ask our Downey office (12047 Paramount Blvd) directly whether an interim document is acceptable, or whether we need the final physical title. Family transfers in California may be exempt from use tax if you complete a Statement of Facts (REG 256) declaring the transfer as a gift between family members – saving 7%–10% of vehicle value in tax is meaningful.
Almost never. The math: a used vehicle purchased at $4,000 retail might appraise for $2,500–$3,500 at our inspection. A title loan against that appraised value typically funds at 30%–55% LTV, meaning the loan might be $750–$1,925 – far less than what you spent acquiring the vehicle. You’d have spent $4,000 cash to access $1,500 in loan proceeds at ~40% APR, while taking on the costs of insurance, registration, smog, and maintenance for a vehicle you didn’t need.
The only scenario where buying a vehicle for collateral makes sense is if you genuinely need transportation independently of the loan, in which case the title loan is a secondary consideration. If your need is purely cash, a credit union personal loan, secured personal loan against a savings account, or a cash advance from a credit card all dramatically outperform “buy a car to use as collateral.”
