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Compramos CarrosDFW
Bedford, TX

Bedford doesn't chase noise. Neither should selling a car.

Quiet, predictable, and finished in one trip. Bedford sellers get a firm number with no haggling, an office appointment that runs on time, and payment that posts before you're home for dinner.

  • No haggling
  • Firm offer
  • No surprises

Why Bedford drivers sell

Bedford is one of the calmer HEB cities — established neighborhoods, settled families, schools in walking distance. We serve all of it, from the streets near Harwood Park up to the borders with Hurst and Euless, and out toward the 820 loop.

Bedford sellers tend to have owned their cars longer than average — 7+ years is common. When they sell, they want a respectful process and a fair number, not a high-pressure lot experience. The typical Bedford sale is a sedan the kids have outgrown, a truck used weekends for home projects, or a grandparent's car after they stopped driving.

  • Sedan the kids drove through high school and college
  • Weekend project truck — Home Depot runs, small hauls
  • Grandparent's car after they stopped driving
  • Second car the household doesn't need anymore
  • Mid-life upgrade to something newer
  • Insurance-totaled vehicle you kept the salvage on

How a Bedford sale reads

The message

You text us the VIN, mileage, and a couple of honest photos. No sales script, no push to 'just come in and we'll talk about price.' A specific number comes back, usually within 15 minutes.

The accept

If the number works, you accept and we send you the office address. You pick when. Evening or Saturday appointments are common for Bedford sellers who work regular hours.

The visit

45 minutes. Respectful, thorough, no theatrics. We go through the car with you, not at you. Texas title transfer paperwork gets done while you have coffee.

The payment

Check same day. ACH is popular with Bedford clients — posts the same day, no cash-transport concerns. Plates come home with you.

Bedford sellers who closed recently

We'd had the car since 2015. Driven it into the ground. Wasn't looking forward to the selling process. They made it feel like a non-event.

Richard & Janet M.
Harwood Park · 9-year owners

My dad stopped driving. The car sat for a year. One quote, one appointment, one Saturday morning — done.

Carol W.
Meadow Park

Totaled my SUV, kept the salvage. They bought it at a fair number and I didn't have to haul it anywhere.

Josh R.
820 loop · total-loss keeper

Long-owned, well-loved cars are most of what Bedford brings us. We treat them like the family fixtures they are — not as wholesale units to churn.

Frequently asked questions

We've had the car for 9+ years — is that a problem?

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Not at all. Long-owned cars from a single household often have better maintenance history than fleet-churned vehicles, and Bedford's garage culture keeps paint and interiors in good shape. Long ownership can actually help the offer when maintenance records accompany it.

The car was my father's — he's deceased. What paperwork do I need?

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The death certificate, the original title in his name, and either letters testamentary (if there's a will going through probate) or a small-estate affidavit (for Texas estates under $75,000 without probate). Bring photos of what you have first — we'll tell you if anything's missing before you drive in.

My insurance totaled the car but I kept the salvage — can I sell it?

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Yes. Texas issues a salvage title after an insurance total-loss. Salvage-titled cars sell at 50–70% of clean-title value. If the car was declared a total loss but you rebuilt it and got a rebuilt title, it's worth closer to 70–80% of clean.

Do you buy cars with extended warranties still active?

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Yes. Extended warranties don't typically transfer to new owners (or they transfer with a fee) — so they don't raise our offer directly. But some warranties refund the unused portion back to you when the car is sold. Call your warranty company and ask; $500–$2,000 refunds are common on higher-end policies.

How long does it take to get the title after paying off my loan?

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Texas law requires the lienholder to release the title within 10 business days of loan payoff. Some credit unions do it faster (2–3 days); some banks take the full 10. Once released, it's either mailed to you or transferred electronically in your TxDMV account.

What if the title is in my spouse's name and they're traveling this week?

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They can sign a notarized power of attorney before they travel, or we can schedule your appointment for when they return. Most Bedford sellers opt to wait a few days for both parties to be present — it's usually faster than arranging the notary across distance.

Sell your car today

Simple process, in Spanish, from your phone.

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