India is rapidly moving towards the e-challan system. It is a camera-based surveillance and automated penalty system that has significantly increased on Indian roads in recent years.
Most Indians think selling a car is generally a simple transaction in which they agree on the price, hand over the keys, sign a few documents, and that’s it. But that isn’t the case legally.
Until the RC is transferred, the previous owner is still recognised as the vehicle’s “registered owner” and is therefore responsible for any traffic infractions, criminal misuse, or insurance disputes pertaining to the car.
In order to close this gap, the popular used car marketplace CARS24 has implemented a post-sale liability protection policy known as “Seller Kavach,” which is intended to protect sellers from financial and legal risk following the sale of their vehicle, till the RC transfer is completed. Let’s get into more details and understand what the post-sale liabilities are and how CARS24’s Seller Kavach can help you after you’ve sold your car.
The Post-Sale Liability Problem
India is rapidly moving towards the e-challan system. It is a camera-based surveillance and automated penalty system that has significantly increased on Indian roads in recent years. Hence, many sellers receive notification for e-challans after they have sold their cars, illegal use of the vehicle for smuggling, unlawful modification and a lot more. In addition, previous owners had to be involved in hit-and-run investigations or court summonses because the car’s RC had not yet been updated.
Such incidents are increasingly becoming common because of the lag between physical handover and the digital update of ownership. RC transfer still takes anywhere from 30 days to several months, depending on documentation, NOC requirements, hypothecation removal and RTO workload. Until the transfer is reflected in the VAHAN database, the previous owner remains answerable for all violations.
CARS24 Seller Kavach: What the Policy Does
CARS24’s ‘Seller Kavach’ works as a protective shield for the sellers until the RC has been transferred in the name of the new buyer. The plan reportedly covers:
- Traffic challans issued after the sale
- Accident-related liabilities
- Police complaints or criminal misuse involving the car
- Fraudulent or illegal activities performed using the car
- Free legal support, including representation in police stations and courts
- RC transfer assurance with legal backing
With the Seller Kavach, there is no maximum cap on the financial liability cover. CARS24 states that the policy has previously handled individual seller cases exceeding ₹10 lakh in liability value.
It thus becomes an ultimate safety net through which sellers are insulated from claim notices or investigations that would otherwise reach them solely because the RC change is pending.
How the Seller Kavach Policy Works
The Seller Kavach protection starts on the same day the vehicle is sold through the CARS24 platform. It remains active until the RC transfer is completed and the seller’s name is removed from VAHAN records.
The company has kept Seller Kavach as an optional add-on. It carries a nominal one-time fee, which is disclosed during the transaction. This is to ensure that customer don’t feel forced into purchasing additional products while selling their cars. Customers who do not opt for Seller Kavach still receive standard RC transfer support from the company, but without liability protection.
For customers who opt for Seller Kavach, CARS24 provides legal representation at no additional cost. In the event of any dispute, the policy ensures sellers do not have to hire lawyers or deal with authorities directly.
Customers can activate the protection plan in two ways:
- During the sale process through the CARS24 consultant
- By writing to the customer care team via email before the RC process is completed
Used Car Industry Relevance
In India’s used car market, liability is still a grey area, especially in private transactions where buyer cooperation is crucial, and documentation is frequently disjointed. Once the car is out of the seller’s possession, there are high chances that they will be held accountable for violations they did not commit.
Unorganised local dealers rarely accept accountability for legal complications post-sale. In these cases, sellers either pursue the buyer themselves or hire legal support independently. Seller Kavach attempts to formalise this neglected layer of consumer protection.
If seller protection schemes like ‘Seller Kavach’ gain traction, they could influence industry practices by:
- Encouraging more transparent post-sale documentation
- Increasing adoption of digital RC tracking
- Pressuring offline dealers to offer similar liability guarantees
- Reducing police and RTO disputes linked to previous ownership
However, the model’s effectiveness will depend on consistent RC follow-ups and the company’s ability to handle legal interventions at scale.
Conclusion
CARS24’s Seller Kavach represents an effort to address a persistent vulnerability in used-car sales, which is the liability gap between sale and official RC transfer. As post-sale disputes become more common in an increasingly digital enforcement environment, structured liability protection may evolve into a standard offering rather than a niche add-on. Seller Kavach will act as a boon for sellers who are wary of unexpected challans, police notices or legal entanglements.