UTAH DEALER SCHOOL - ESCUELA DE DEALERS State-approved Utah dealer education
English Español
Get notified

The path to your license

How to become a dealer in Utah.

This is the exact path I’m following for my own license — every step, fee, and form, in the order I’d tell you to do them today.

Typical timeline: 6–10 weeks Regulator: Utah MVED

The big picture

Two approvals, running side by side.

Your city approves the lot. The state approves you. Open both on day one — the slower one decides when you open — that was true for me too.

City track

Your city or county

Zoning check on your location
Conditional Use Permit (CUP), if required
City business license
Sign permit

State track

Utah MVED

8-hour dealer orientation course
$75,000 surety bond + insurance
TC-301 application + fingerprints
Lot inspection → license issued

Why I push this: MVED won’t issue your license until your lot passes inspection, and the lot has to clear city zoning first. Until the city signs off, everything else just waits.

Step by step

The roadmap, in seven steps.

1

Set up the business

Foundation

Form your LLC and register the name with the Utah Division of Corporations — file a DBA if you’ll operate under a different name. Get a free EIN from the IRS, then open a Utah sales-tax account at tax.utah.gov. MVED requires the sales-tax license in your application.

LLC ~$59DBA ~$22EIN free1–2 days online

Take this one from me: they read every line. Two details that slow people down: different forms want different addresses — know where your home address goes and where the lot’s goes — and how your DBA is owned matters, whether it’s under the LLC or under you personally. Get both consistent across the packet before you file.

2

Secure your location & clear the city

Slowest step — start early

Call the city planning office before you sign anything — vehicle sales are only allowed in certain zones, and I don’t want you paying rent on a lot you can’t use. Many cities also require a Conditional Use Permit, sometimes with a hearing. On top of that, the state has its own physical standards:

Display space for at least 3 vehicles
A permanent building with an office that securely holds records
Lot fenced or marked — no shared space with another business
A permanent sign, at least 24 sq ft, with your full licensed name

Once CUP conditions are met, pull the city business license and sign permit. You can’t sell from home or any unlicensed location.

3

Get your bond & insurance

Foundation

You’ll keep a $75,000 surety bond on file the whole time you operate. Don’t panic at the number — you pay a yearly premium to a bond agent, not the full amount. While you’re at it, get a garage liability quote; you’ll need it for your dealer plates.

Form TC-450Premium varies by creditMust never lapse

Heads up: everyone who signs on the bond also has to take the 8-hour course.

4

Take the 8-hour dealer course

You’re here — this is us

This is where I come in. The state requires an MVED-approved 8-hour orientation before you apply — licensing law, forms and records, advertising rules, and the federal side (IRS 8300, Buyers Guide, OFAC). My course walks you through all of it, and your certificate is issued the moment you finish.

My course is $49 — on your phone, in English and Spanish, with Listen mode on every unit. Each partner, officer, indemnitor, and manager needs their own certificate.

Start the course
5

File your MVED application

License $127

Now you put it all together. The Bonded Motor Vehicle Business Application (Form TC-301) goes to MVED with the complete packet:

Signed TC-301 + the $127 used-dealer license fee
The $75,000 bond (TC-450) and your sales-tax license
Photos of the sign, the lot, and every owner or partner
Proof of the 8-hour course — one certificate per required person
Fingerprint card + ~$20 per owner (TC-465) — the fee varies by where you get printed

An MVED officer then inspects your lot within 5–10 working days. There’s no license until it passes, so have the sign up and hours posted before they arrive — a quick fix now beats a second visit later.

6

License issued — start dealing

Go live

Pull your dealer plates — they’re how you legally drive your inventory, and new dealers start with a limited number. If you plan to buy salvage at Copart or IAA like me, add the Salvage Buyer license (TC-305, $203/yr); it can only be issued after your dealer license exists. Then open your auction accounts and go buy your first car — and run it all on DealerPronto — my team and I built it to run the whole store, not just the paperwork. Every graduate gets 30 days of Pro free.

Plates expire June 30 — no grace periodNever on a sold car
7

Stay compliant

Ongoing

This is the rhythm every dealer lives by, month after month — I cover all of it in the course, and DealerPronto keeps the paperwork on schedule — and runs the rest of the store too:

Every sale — TC-466 disclosure, Buyers Guide in the window, title within 48 hours, IRS 8300 on cash over $10,000
Every month — Monthly Report of Sale (TC-928) within 10 days, even if you sold nothing
Every year — renew license, plates, and bond by June 30, plus the 3-hour renewal course
Advertising — the price you advertise must be the price they pay, except tax, title, and registration

Graduate perk

30 days of DealerPronto Pro free for every graduate — deals, day-to-day operations, and the paperwork, all in one place. Start your dealership on it.

dealerpronto.com ↗

Budget

What it costs to start.

The real fees, line by line. Your bond premium and insurance will depend on your credit and coverage.

LLC formation
Utah Div. of Corporations · +$18/yr renewal
~$59
DBA / assumed name (if used)
Utah Div. of Corporations
~$22
Federal EIN & sales-tax license
IRS · Utah State Tax Commission
Free
8-hour orientation course
Utah Dealer School — per person
$49
$75,000 surety bond
Bond agent
Premium varies
Garage / liability insurance
Insurance agent
Quote varies
Dealer license + plates
MVED · plate fees depend on how many you pull
~$127 + plates
Fingerprints
TC-465 · varies by where you get printed
~$20 / owner
CUP, business license & sign permit
Your city
City fees vary
Salvage Buyer license (optional)
MVED (TC-305)
$203/yr

Pace

A realistic timeline.

The city sets the pace — everything else runs alongside it. Plan on 6–10 weeks, start to finish.

Week 1Form the LLC, get the EIN and sales-tax license, confirm zoning, start the CUP.
Weeks 1–2Take the 8-hour course. Get bond and insurance quotes.
Weeks 2–6Work the CUP conditions; secure the lot, build out the office, install the sign.
Weeks 5–7Bond on file, city license in hand → submit TC-301 to MVED.
Weeks 6–8MVED lot inspection → license issued.
AfterDealer plates, salvage BID card, auction accounts, first purchase.

Reference

Key contacts & forms.

Utah MVED
Dealer & salvage licensing · 801-297-2600 · mved.utah.gov
MVED — mailing address
210 N 1950 W, Salt Lake City, UT 84134
Div. of Corporations
LLC, business name, DBA · 801-530-4849
State Tax Commission
Sales-tax license · 801-297-2200 · tax.utah.gov
Dept. of Financial Institutions
Self-financing (BHPH) · 801-538-8830
Your city planning office
Zoning, CUP, business license
TC-301
Bonded Motor Vehicle Business Application — the license
TC-450
Bond of Motor Vehicle Dealer
TC-465
Fingerprint waiver — each owner
TC-303
Salesperson license, if you hire staff
TC-305
Salvage Buyer license — the auction BID card
TC-466 · TC-928
Per-sale disclosure · Monthly Report of Sale
IRS 8300
Cash over $10,000 — file within 15 days

I wrote this page to teach, not to give legal advice. Requirements, fees, and forms change — always confirm current rules with MVED (801-297-2600 · mved.utah.gov), the State Tax Commission, and your city. Figures reflect Utah requirements as of 2026.