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Used car dealer fees in Hawaii

Buying a used car in Hawaii, expect a documentation fee (no cap; ~$200–$400 typical), sales tax of 4% state + county surcharge, a title fee around $5, and registration (weight-based; ~$45–$75/yr+). Everything beyond those four lines deserves scrutiny before you sign.

Doc fee
No cap; ~$200–$400 typical
Sales tax
4% state + county surcharge
Title fee
~$5
Registration
Weight-based; ~$45–$75/yr+

Frequently asked

Is the doc fee capped in Hawaii?

No. Hawaii does not cap the documentation fee, and dealers commonly charge ~$200–$400 typical. The fee itself is rarely dropped, so negotiate the out-the-door total instead.

How much is sales tax on a used car in Hawaii?

4% state + county surcharge. Tax is a government charge, not dealer profit — but check that it is calculated on the correct price, with any trade-in credit applied where Hawaii allows it.

Which dealer fees can I refuse in Hawaii?

Government charges (sales tax, title, registration) are fixed. Everything else — doc fee, dealer prep, VIN etching, paint protection, nitrogen tires, appearance packages — is dealer profit. You may not get individual lines removed, but you can negotiate the out-the-door total down to offset them, or walk away.

What is a fair out-the-door price in Hawaii?

Take the agreed vehicle price, add Hawaii's tax (4% state + county surcharge), title (~$5), and registration, plus a doc fee in line with no cap; ~$200–$400 typical. If the quote is meaningfully above that math, ask the dealer to walk you through every added line.

Figures are typical published amounts as of 2026-07-03 and can change with legislation or local rates. Always verify current caps, tax rates, and fees with the Hawaii DMV or your county before signing.

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