How Ohio taxes a car purchase
Ohio applies a 5.75% state sales tax to the vehicle price, plus a county add-on of 0.25%–2.25% (effective rates typically 6.5%–8.0%). Trade-in value is deducted from the taxable amount on dealer purchases.
Title and registration in Ohio
Ohio charges a $15 title fee and around $35 annual registration. There's no sales-tax cap, and you owe tax to your county clerk when you title the vehicle.
Official source: Ohio Bureau of Motor Vehicles.
Average Ohio auto loan APR by credit tier
Rates below are national averages from the Q1 2026 Experian State of the Automotive Finance Market. Your personal APR depends on credit profile, loan term, vehicle age, and lender — use these as benchmarks, not quotes.
| Credit tier | New car APR | Used car APR |
|---|---|---|
| Super-prime (781+) | 5.64% | 7.66% |
| Prime (661–780) | 6.87% | 9.06% |
| Non-prime (601–660) | 9.62% | 13.72% |
| Sub-prime (501–600) | 12.85% | 18.97% |
| Deep sub-prime (<500) | 15.62% | 21.18% |
Average vehicle prices in Ohio
The average new-vehicle transaction price is around $47,200; typical used vehicles transact around $25,700. Source: January 2026 Kelley Blue Book.
Top Ohio credit unions for auto loans
Credit unions consistently price below large national banks for non-prime borrowers and remain competitive at the prime tier. These three are widely accessible to Ohio residents:
- Wright-Patt Credit Union — Largest credit union in Ohio; statewide membership.
- General Electric Credit Union — Cincinnati-headquartered; competitive prime-tier auto rates.
- Telhio Credit Union — Columbus-based; strong used-car loan programs.
Ohio consumer protections to know
Lemon law
Ohio's Lemon Law (Ohio Rev. Code §1345.71) covers new vehicles within the first 12 months or 18,000 miles. The lemon presumption applies after three repair attempts or 30 days out of service.
Repossession timeline
Ohio permits self-help repossession after default without prior notice. The lender must send a post-repossession notice of disposition and account for surplus or deficiency after sale.
GAP insurance
GAP is optional in Ohio. Refunds of unearned premiums are required when the underlying loan is paid off early.
What goes into the Ohio payment
The financed amount is the vehicle price plus Ohio sales tax and title/registration fees, minus your down payment, trade-in equity, and any rebates. The calculator above is pre-filled with the 5.75% statewide rate and roughly $100 in fees — replace these with your locality's actual figures for the most accurate result.
Compare other Ohio loan terms
Run the same vehicle at different term lengths to see how monthly payment and total interest compare:
Common Ohio-specific mistakes
- Using the statewide rate without the local add-on — many counties and cities raise the effective rate.
- Assuming trade-in always reduces taxable amount — not all states allow this.
- Forgetting annual property tax, license, or VLF that some states levy separately from purchase tax.
What the Ohio number really tells you
The monthly payment our calculator shows is what your lender would charge if your loan were exactly the size of the financed amount we computed (vehicle price + Ohio sales tax + fees, minus down payment and trade-in equity). That number is accurate to the cent for the inputs you provide, but two things still move the real-world result: your lender's actual APR (a credit-tier decision, not a single market number) and your locality's effective tax rate, which often runs 1–3 percentage points above the statewide 5.75% base. Adjust both inputs and you have the closest thing to your real monthly bill before signing.
Saving on a Ohio auto loan
The two biggest savings levers in any state are APR and term, not the tax line. Cutting the APR by 1 percentage point saves a typical Ohio buyer $500–$1,000 in lifetime interest on a $30,000 loan; cutting the term from 72 to 60 months saves another $1,000–$1,500. Sales tax savings are real but usually one-time and modest in comparison.
- Get pre-approved at a Ohio credit union. Member-owned local credit unions are consistently the cheapest auto-lending channel for sub-prime and non-prime borrowers, and competitive for prime borrowers too. The pre-approval gives you a real APR to compare against any dealer offer.
- Shop multiple lenders inside a 14-day window. All auto-loan hard pulls inside that window count as a single inquiry for FICO scoring. Shopping rates costs you nothing on your credit and often saves a percentage point or more on the APR.
- Verify your local effective tax rate. Your county or city may add 1%–3% to the Ohio statewide rate. The calculator's default is the statewide base; nudge it up for your locality.
- Consider a shorter term. Use the 60-month and 48-month calculators to see how the same vehicle financed over a shorter window changes total interest.
Ohio auto loan FAQs
What credit score do Ohio lenders look for?
Like every state, Ohio lenders use national credit-scoring tiers — super-prime (781+), prime (661–780), non-prime (601–660), sub-prime (501–600), and deep sub-prime (under 500). A higher score buys a better APR, not a different process. State-chartered credit unions in Ohio often have more flexible underwriting for non-prime borrowers than national banks.
Are dealer doc fees regulated in Ohio?
A handful of states cap dealer documentation fees by statute (Illinois at around $360, New York at $175). Most states, including Ohio unless otherwise noted in the title and registration section above, leave the cap to market forces — meaning fees of $400–$700 are common at large dealers. The fee is almost always negotiable. Ask for it to be reduced or itemized before signing.
Does Ohio have an annual personal property tax on vehicles?
Some states (notably Virginia, parts of Massachusetts via Excise Tax, and Arizona via VLT) charge an annual tax based on your vehicle's assessed value. The state-specific notes above explain Ohio rules. Annual property tax is separate from sales tax at purchase and shouldn't be confused with your loan payment.
Can I register a car in Ohio if I bought it in another state?
Yes. Ohio will collect any tax owed at registration, with credit for tax already paid in the purchase state (the "reciprocity" rule). Bring the bill of sale, title, and any out-of-state tax receipts. The amount due at registration is usually the difference between Ohio's rate and the rate you already paid.
Do I have to use a Ohio lender to buy a Ohio car?
No. You can use any lender licensed to lend in the U.S. National banks, online lenders, and out-of-state credit unions are all options. The lender registers a lien on the title with the Ohio DMV; the state-of-origin of the lender doesn't change anything about your loan or registration.
Other state auto loan calculators
Each state calculator is pre-filled with that state's sales tax and average title/registration fees:
- Illinois auto loan calculator — 6.25% state sales tax
- Michigan auto loan calculator — 6% state sales tax
- Arizona auto loan calculator — 5.6% state sales tax
- Virginia auto loan calculator — 4.15% state sales tax
- Georgia auto loan calculator — 6.6% state sales tax
- Massachusetts auto loan calculator — 6.25% state sales tax
- New Jersey auto loan calculator — 6.625% state sales tax
- New York auto loan calculator — 4% state sales tax
- See all states →
Frequently asked questions
What is the sales tax on a car in Ohio?+
Ohio's statewide rate is 5.75%. Ohio applies a 5.75% state sales tax to the vehicle price, plus a county add-on of 0.25%–2.25% (effective rates typically 6.5%–8.0%). Trade-in value is deducted from the taxable amount on dealer purchases.
How much are car registration and title fees in Ohio?+
Ohio charges a $15 title fee and around $35 annual registration. There's no sales-tax cap, and you owe tax to your county clerk when you title the vehicle.
Does Ohio tax the trade-in value?+
Trade-in value is generally deducted from the taxable amount on dealer purchases in Ohio, though specific caps may apply. Check your bill of sale.
Is the calculator's 5.75% rate accurate for my city?+
5.75% is Ohio's statewide base rate. Most counties and cities add to it, so your effective rate may be 1–3 percentage points higher. Adjust the sales-tax field in the calculator if you know your local rate.