Varies from state to state. Most states require the vehicle have a current inspection and they don't have to be inspected again just because of an ownership change.
Call the local state police barracks or state inspection center in your state.
2007-02-28 06:16:23
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answer #1
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answered by wizjp 7
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Depends on where you live and the warrenty agreement provided by the dealership or individual. Florida does not have a lemon law for used cars, the lemon law only provides for brand new cars. Most used-car warranties are worth about as much as the paper they're written on. You should've got this information up front, before purchase of the car, in writing. If it was purchased "as-is", that's exactly what you get. "As-is". Which means if anything happens, it's on you.
If you're talking about emissions testing, generally it's going to have a current inspection. If it does not, you have 30 days to get the emissions checked.
2007-02-28 06:17:39
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answer #2
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answered by sovereign_carrie 5
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A...most people inspect the car BEFORE they buy it. In some states, you can return a vehicle in 3 days (a buyers remorse if you will), but you may be required to pay costs for mileage put on the car, and these can be pretty unreasonable.
2007-02-28 07:09:01
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answer #3
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answered by Jeffrey S 6
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Depends on where you live. But it is usually a good idea to have a mechanic inspect it before you actually buy it.
2007-02-28 07:36:34
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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have you ever waiting ANY of the posts here the place morons purchase a vehicle and think of they have an outstanding to return or a lemon regulation to hide them on used autos? the actual good ones are people who've a relative who sells/offered vehicles or they think of they comprehend all of it...then they discover out the troublesome way that meaning below the fee of pink meat in India.
2016-10-16 23:03:20
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answer #5
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answered by dusik 4
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