Consumer template
Bill of Sale Template: how to write it, what to include, and common mistakes
A sale document for personal property covering item description, price, payment, as-is terms, delivery, and signatures.
What this bill of sale template is for
Use this when selling a car, bike, electronics, furniture, or other personal property.
This free bill of sale template is designed as a practical starting point, not a final legal opinion. It helps organize the facts, duties, deadlines, payment terms, and signatures that usually matter in a consumer document. Before using it, replace every placeholder with real information and check whether your state, country, court, employer, platform, landlord, or counterparty requires special language.
How to write a bill of sale template
- 1. Identify the parties clearly. Use full legal names, mailing addresses, emails, and role labels such as landlord, tenant, client, contractor, buyer, seller, employer, employee, borrower, or lender.
- 2. State the purpose in plain language. A reader should understand what the document does within the first paragraph. Avoid vague background facts that do not change the parties' rights.
- 3. Define the core obligations. Spell out who must do what, by when, where performance happens, and what counts as acceptable completion.
- 4. Add money, timing, and evidence details. If the document involves payment, deposits, refunds, deadlines, invoices, photos, receipts, or attachments, describe them precisely.
- 5. Include consequences and next steps. Explain what happens if someone misses a deadline, refuses performance, breaches the agreement, or needs to terminate the relationship.
- 6. Finish with review and signatures. Add signature blocks, dates, printed names, titles, and any witness, notary, attachment, or delivery requirements that apply locally.
Key clauses and sections to include
Seller
Seller should be written in concrete terms, with names, dates, amounts, deadlines, responsibilities, and any condition that changes the parties' obligations under the bill of sale template.
Buyer
Buyer should be written in concrete terms, with names, dates, amounts, deadlines, responsibilities, and any condition that changes the parties' obligations under the bill of sale template.
Item
Item should be written in concrete terms, with names, dates, amounts, deadlines, responsibilities, and any condition that changes the parties' obligations under the bill of sale template.
Price
Price should be written in concrete terms, with names, dates, amounts, deadlines, responsibilities, and any condition that changes the parties' obligations under the bill of sale template.
Payment
Payment should be written in concrete terms, with names, dates, amounts, deadlines, responsibilities, and any condition that changes the parties' obligations under the bill of sale template.
As-Is
As-Is should be written in concrete terms, with names, dates, amounts, deadlines, responsibilities, and any condition that changes the parties' obligations under the bill of sale template.
Delivery
Delivery should be written in concrete terms, with names, dates, amounts, deadlines, responsibilities, and any condition that changes the parties' obligations under the bill of sale template.
Representations
Representations should be written in concrete terms, with names, dates, amounts, deadlines, responsibilities, and any condition that changes the parties' obligations under the bill of sale template.
Signatures
Signatures should be written in concrete terms, with names, dates, amounts, deadlines, responsibilities, and any condition that changes the parties' obligations under the bill of sale template.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Using vague dates or amounts. Replace phrases like “soon,” “reasonable,” or “market rate” with exact dates, dollar amounts, formulas, or objective standards.
- Forgetting local law. Many legal documents change by jurisdiction. A clause that works in one state or country may be unenforceable or incomplete elsewhere.
- Leaving blank placeholders. Blank names, addresses, deadlines, exhibits, or payment fields create ambiguity and make the document harder to enforce.
- Copying a clause without understanding it. If a clause changes liability, ownership, confidentiality, termination, arbitration, fees, or rights after a dispute, review it carefully before signing.
- Skipping evidence and delivery records. For letters and disputes, save proof of delivery, screenshots, invoices, photos, receipts, and all replies.
Word-ready prompt
Use this prompt to generate a customized version of the template. LibraDojo can turn it into a complete editable draft and then export it as a Word document.
Draft a bill of sale in Word-ready format. Include seller, buyer, item description, serial or VIN placeholder, price, payment method, delivery, as-is language, seller representations, taxes/fees placeholder, and signatures.Generate this template in chat
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Create a safer draft
Start from this bill of sale template, answer a few customization questions, and generate a polished Word-ready document with sections, placeholders, and a checklist of items to verify.
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