General Bill of Sale
What is a General Bill of Sale?
A General Bill of Sale is a written record that transfers ownership of personal property from a seller to a buyer. It captures who sold what, to whom, for how much, and on what date — and confirms that the seller had the right to sell it.
Unlike a contract for future performance, a Bill of Sale documents a sale that is happening now. Once signed, it serves as proof that ownership has changed hands.
This is a "general" template, meaning it works for most types of personal property — equipment, electronics, furniture, tools, collectibles, livestock, and similar items. Vehicles, boats, and firearms often require a state-specific bill of sale and additional title or registration paperwork.
When People Use It?
A General Bill of Sale is typically used in private, one-time sales between two parties — situations where there is no dealer, no invoice system, and no built-in receipt. Common examples include:
- Selling used equipment, machinery, or tools to another individual or business
- Private sales of furniture, appliances, electronics, or collectibles
- Transfers of inventory or fixed assets between businesses
- Gifts or family transfers where written proof of transfer is helpful
- Sales arranged through online marketplaces or classified listings
- Closing out an estate or selling personal property as part of a move or downsizing
Why People Use It?
A handshake and a payment app transfer can move money, but they don't prove ownership. A Bill of Sale closes that gap. People use it to:
- Create a clear paper trail showing the buyer is now the lawful owner
- Confirm the agreed price and payment method, reducing the risk of later disputes
- Document the condition of the item at the time of sale, including any "as-is" terms
- Capture the seller's confirmation that the property is free of liens or undisclosed claims
- Support tax reporting, insurance claims, or registration where receipts are required
- Give both sides a reference point if questions come up after the sale
What the Template Gives You?
This template walks through the standard sections of a Bill of Sale and provides clearly marked fields for each piece of information. It includes:
- Party details for both individual and business sellers and buyers, including signatory information for entities
- A property description section to identify exactly what is being sold
- Purchase price, payment method, and payment status fields
- A transfer-of-ownership date, marking when rights and responsibilities pass to the buyer
- An "as-is" condition clause confirming the buyer had a chance to inspect the property
- Standard seller representations covering ownership, accuracy, and any liens or claims
- A governing law field so the parties can specify which state's laws apply
- Standard closing clauses: entire agreement, severability, additional terms, and signature blocks