Title Loan Statistics in Lake Elsinore, CA
$5,670
Average Title Loan in Lake Elsinore
$16,326
Average Vehicle Value
7
Loans Funded in 2025
34.7%
Average Loan-to-Value
Based on 7 title loans funded in 2025
Most Common Vehicles for Title Loans in Lake Elsinore, CA
| Vehicle Make | Avg. Year | Avg. Mileage | # of Loans |
|---|---|---|---|
| Toyota | 2014 | 174,369 mi | 3 |
| Land Rover | 2015 | 77,000 mi | 1 |
| Mercedes-Benz | 2015 | 140,746 mi | 1 |
| Nissan | 2018 | 100,000 mi | 1 |
| Peterbilt | 2019 | 461,000 mi | 1 |
Recent Title Loans Funded in Lake Elsinore, CA
The table below shows actual title loans funded in Lake Elsinore, CA. Amounts vary based on each vehicle’s make, model, year, and condition.
| Year | Make | Model | Miles | Funded Amount |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2005 | Toyota | Highlander | 188,000 | $3,921 |
| 2015 | Land Rover | Range Rover Evoque | 77,000 | $4,015 |
| 2019 | Peterbilt | 389-SERIES | 461,000 | $10,000 |
| 2015 | Mercedes-Benz | C Class | 140,746 | $7,354 |
| 2018 | Nissan | Frontier | 100,000 | $7,875 |
| 2018 | Toyota | Camry | 145,106 | $4,001 |
| 2019 | Toyota | Camry | 190,000 | $2,525 |
Frequently Asked Questions About Title Loans in Lake Elsinore, CA
Yes – we offer boat title loans as a separate service, and Lake Elsinore’s lake culture makes boat ownership relatively common here. Three considerations differ from car title loans.
Vessels and PWCs (personal watercraft like Jet Skis) are titled separately through California DMV with different registration paperwork than motor vehicles. Appraisal accounts for hull condition, engine hours, year, and vessel type rather than odometer reading – well-maintained ski boats can hold value remarkably well for 10+ years if engines are in good shape, while neglected hulls depreciate quickly. The regulatory framework for vessel-secured loans may differ from motor vehicle title loans under the California Financing Law – ask our Lake Elsinore office (18770 Conard Ave) to clarify which APR cap applies for boat or PWC title loans and confirm in writing before signing.
Class 8 owner-operator income (long-haul tractors like the Peterbilt 389 we funded for $10,000 recently in Lake Elsinore) is verifiable but documentation looks like a small business. Please bring prior-year tax returns (Schedule C for sole proprietors), settlement statements from brokers, dispatch records or load board history, business bank statements showing freight payments, and any 1099s from carriers.
Two practical considerations for owner-operators: many Class 8 owner-operators carry significant chattel debt on the truck itself (the original financing), which must be paid off or factored into how we structure the loan. And Class 8 trucks have specialized appraisal – engine hours, recent overhauls, transmission and turbo condition, and current DOT inspection status all factor heavily, often more than odometer mileage. Bring service records and current registration to support a stronger appraisal.
Yes – we offer RV title loans as a separate service, and Inland Empire RV culture (Lake Elsinore is a popular RV destination) makes RV ownership common here. Three categories to know.
Motorhomes (Class A, B, C) drive under their own power, have motor vehicle titles, and are eligible under our standard RV title loan products. Travel trailers, fifth-wheels, and gooseneck trailers are titled separately as trailers, with different paperwork – they may qualify under a trailer-specific product. Truck campers and pop-up campers without their own titles (mounted on a separate pickup truck) generally don’t qualify directly; the underlying truck would be the collateral.
Two practical notes: RV appraisal accounts for condition of plumbing, propane, electrical systems, slide-outs, and roof – not just exterior – so a recent inspection helps; and current registration and clear title are required.
The 34.7% Lake Elsinore LTV is below the California statewide average of 47.2%, but it is based on only seven recent loans, so the sample is small. Recent loans also show that some higher-value vehicles funded well below their retail value, including a Mercedes C-Class at $7,354 and a Land Rover Range Rover Evoque at $4,015.
There are three main reasons this can happen. First, luxury vehicles may receive lower appraisals because resale demand can be more limited, especially for older European models. Second, your loan amount still depends on your documented income and ability to repay, not only the vehicle’s value. Third, some loans may be sized within the $2,500 to $10,000 rate-cap range, even when the vehicle is worth more.
Because of this, a $30,000 BMW may support a $5,000 to $7,000 loan rather than an amount closer to its retail value. If you need more than $10,000, it is worth reviewing the numbers carefully before moving forward.
If your household has two vehicles, it is worth choosing carefully which one to use for the loan. Three things should guide the decision.
First, choose the vehicle you could manage without in a worst-case repossession. If one vehicle is your work commuter and the other is mostly recreational, the recreational vehicle may be the safer choice.
Second, choose a vehicle with a clear title in your name, current registration, and current comprehensive insurance. Secondary vehicles sometimes have expired registration or non-operation status, which may need to be fixed before the loan can move forward.
Third, choose the vehicle that best supports the loan amount you need. A higher-value vehicle you rarely drive may be a better option than a daily driver with a similar value.
If you have titles for both vehicles, we can review both and provide quotes.