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If you apply online, a paper copy of your replacement title will usually arrive about 7 to 14 business days after your application is processed. On the other hand, if you apply by mail, your copy could take up to six weeks to reach you.
Customers who desire a paper title can go to AZMVDNow.gov, log in to their account, click on \u201cTitle Replacement,\u201d submit the $4 processing fee and a PDF of their Arizona Title Summary will instantly appear in their AZ MVD Now account. This allows them to download and print the title information at their convenience.
A vehicle can be registered by a driver even if that car is technically owned (and titled) to another person, a dealership (as with a lease), or a lien holder (like an auto loan lender).
Lienholders hold the title until the lien is satisfied. The vehicle owner must hold a valid registration. All title transactions, including new, transfer, duplicate and corrected, that indicate a lien are processed in the usual manner.
Arizona is a title holding state. If you are purchasing the vehicle on payments, the seller should record the lien on the title, and then hold the title until you have paid off the loan. Once the loan is paid in full, the seller will endorse the lien release on the front of the title and mail the title to you.
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People also ask

When you title or register a vehicle in Arizona, your title information is stored electronically and you no longer automatically receive a paper title. You can view your title information in your AZ MVD Now account. Similarly, when you pay off a vehicle loan, the title will be held electronically.
Must a New York lien waiver be notarized? No. New York does not specifically require lien waivers to be notarized. Additionally, electronic signatures are valid signatures in NY, including on lien waivers, despite the fact that New York has not adopted the UETA framework.
Lienholders hold the title until the lien is satisfied. The vehicle owner must hold a valid registration. All title transactions, including new, transfer, duplicate and corrected, that indicate a lien are processed in the usual manner.
No, Arizona lien waivers do not need to be notarized, even though it's common for contractors to ask for notarized waivers.
Ohio does not require that a lien waiver be notarized.

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