Bill of sale · travel trailer
Travel Trailer Bill of Sale
A camper is a house that titles like a trailer. VIN from the tongue, type and length, what stays inside — plus two photos — in a fillable AS-IS PDF.
Build your PDF
Add photos, then download and fill out PDF.
How do you want to build it?
Add up to two photos of the camper — drag to reposition, zoom to crop — and they are embedded right in the document. Fill in the seller, buyer, and camper details directly in the downloaded PDF, or write them by hand. No paid Acrobat needed.
Photo 1 (optional)
Click or drop a JPG or PNG
Up to 20 MB
Photo 2 (optional)
Click or drop a JPG or PNG
Up to 20 MB
Check the box above to enable the download.
Sample
Photos appear exactly where they will print. The blank lines are fillable text fields in the downloaded PDF.
Towables
Titled like a trailer, packed like a house.
Towable campers — travel trailers, fifth wheels, pop-ups, teardrops — title and register like trailers in most states: VIN on the tongue or frame, no odometer. Note the camper type and length (states often set fees by it), and use the additional-terms box for everything a camper carries with it: awning, batteries, propane tanks, weight-distribution hitch, sway bars, and whatever furnishings stay. Photos of the exterior and interior document the condition the buyer walked through.
Selling a motorhome with an engine? That’s the RV & motorhome bill of sale. A bare utility trailer? Use the trailer bill of sale.
Selling a motorhome with an engine? That’s the RV & motorhome bill of sale. A bare utility trailer? Use the trailer bill of sale.
Hitch-up checklist
Walk the camper before you sign.
- Copy the VIN from the tongue or frame plate — campers title as trailers, no odometer involved.
- Record the type (travel trailer, fifth wheel, pop-up) and length; many states set fees by them.
- Walk the roof seams, run the appliances, and open every slide-out together before signing the AS-IS clause.
- Propane tanks, batteries, awning, and hitch gear: write down what stays.
- Interior and exterior photos freeze the condition the buyer just walked through.
Not legal advice. trailer titling thresholds vary by state and weight.
