How to Sell a Deceased Person’s Car
Selling a deceased person’s car involves more than finding a buyer. Before any sale can take place, families and executors need to understand who has the legal authority to act, what documents are required, and what state-specific rules apply. This guide covers everything in one place, from legal standing to completing the transfer.
Can You Drive a Deceased Person’s Car Before Transfer?
One of the most urgent questions families ask is how long can you drive a deceased person’s car, and the short answer is that you cannot, regardless of your relationship to the deceased.
Across all Australian states and territories, if the registered owner of a vehicle has died, the registration must be transferred to a new registered operator or cancelled before it is driven on a road or road-related area, including driveways, service stations, and shopping centres. (CarsGuide)
This applies whether you are the spouse, child, executor, or next of kin. If the vehicle needs to be moved before registration is transferred, it must be towed or transported rather than driven.
Who Has the Legal Authority to Transfer or Sell the Car?
Not everyone is entitled to deal with a deceased estate vehicle. The law recognises a specific hierarchy of authority.
Only the executor named in the will, or a court-appointed administrator, has the legal authority to sell or transfer a vehicle from a deceased estate. Family members, including a spouse or next of kin, cannot sell the car unless they are formally appointed as executor or administrator. (1800carbuyers)
In Western Australia, a de facto partner holds the same entitlements as a spouse if they lived together as de facto partners for at least two years immediately before the death of the deceased person. (DoT Transport Website)
In the ACT, the order of next-of-kin entitlement is defined by the Administration and Probate Act 1929, which sets out a hierarchy beginning with spouse or civil partner, followed by eligible partners, then children and other relatives.





