Florida · DHSMV · Duplicate Title

Florida Duplicate Mobile Home Title — When the Original Is Lost or Destroyed

Florida processes duplicate manufactured home titles through the Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles (DHSMV) — using Form HSMV 82101, the same form used for vehicle duplicate titles. But the fees and filing location for mobile homes differ from regular cars. Here's exactly what to do.

Important Distinction In Florida, mobile homes titled as personal property go through DHSMV (this guide). If your home has been converted to real property (titled via a deed with the county), contact your county property appraiser instead — DHSMV no longer maintains a title record for real-property-converted homes.

Which Agency Handles Florida Mobile Home Titles?

Florida is one of the states where the Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles (DHSMV) handles manufactured home titles, using a system similar to vehicle titles. This means your mobile home likely has a Florida Certificate of Title — the same blue-bordered document used for cars and trucks, but with the mobile home's year, make, model, serial number, and decal number recorded on it.

The key difference from regular vehicles: mobile homes are physically immovable once installed, which means the duplicate title process is handled locally at your county tax collector's office (acting as DHSMV's agent) rather than at a driver's license office. Some large counties have dedicated motor vehicle title offices.

Florida Form HSMV 82101 — Application for Duplicate Title

The form you need is HSMV 82101, titled "Application for Duplicate or Lost in Transit/Reassignment for a Motor Vehicle, Mobile Home or Vessel Title Certificate." Despite its long name, the mobile home section is simple.

Download it directly from the DHSMV website at flhsmv.gov, or pick up a copy at your county tax collector's office. As of 2025, the most current version is dated 09/23 — verify you have the current version if printing from an older source.

What You'll Fill Out on HSMV 82101

Notarization Required Form HSMV 82101 for a lost title must be notarized. You can sign it at the tax collector's office (they have notaries on staff, typically at no charge for this purpose) or before any Florida-licensed notary public.

Step-by-Step: Getting Your Florida Duplicate Mobile Home Title

  1. Find your mobile home's information You'll need the serial number (usually on a metal plate inside a cabinet, on the door frame, or on the HUD data plate) and the Florida decal number (issued by the county, typically on a sticker near the door). If you don't have either, see the "If You Don't Know the Serial Number" section below.
  2. Download and complete HSMV 82101 Fill out all sections applicable to your situation. Leave the notary section blank until you are in front of a notary. Write the mobile home serial number carefully — it typically has multiple sections (e.g., "FL1234A" and "FL1234B" for a doublewide).
  3. Get the form notarized Take the completed (but unsigned) form to a notary. Your county tax collector's office provides this service free when you are applying for a duplicate title in person. Alternatively, UPS Store, banks, or shipping centers typically charge $5–$15 for notarization.
  4. Gather required documents See the documents list below.
  5. Submit to your county tax collector's office Bring everything in person, or mail to your county tax collector's motor vehicle division. In-person is faster and avoids mail processing delays. Find your county tax collector: flhsmv.gov/offices/.
  6. Pay the fees See fee schedule below.
  7. Receive duplicate title In-person processing: typically same-day or next-day. If the county must order from DHSMV's central office (for older or complex records), allow 5–15 business days.

Required Documents

Complete Fee Breakdown — Florida Duplicate Mobile Home Title

Florida's mobile home title fees involve two separate components that many guides miss: the DHSMV title fee and the county recording fee. Both are required in most situations.

Fee ComponentAmountPaid To
Duplicate title fee (DHSMV)$75.75County tax collector (remitted to DHSMV)
County service charge$2.50County tax collector (retained locally)
Notary fee (if done elsewhere)$5–$15Notary public
County recording fee (if applicable)$10–$30+County clerk of court — see note below
Typical total$78–$125Varies by county
About the County Recording Fee Florida requires mobile homes to have a current "mobile home sticker" (annual registration decal) issued by the county tax collector, separate from the title. If your decal registration is overdue, you may owe back registration fees before the duplicate title is processed. Additionally, if the home is on real property you own, the county may require a statement of mobile home title be recorded in county records — check with your specific county tax collector for whether this applies to your situation.

If You Don't Know the Serial Number

The serial number is essential for a duplicate title application. If you don't have it:

What If There's a Lien on the Title?

If there's an outstanding lien, the lienholder has legal rights over the title. Florida's procedure in this case:

Frequently Asked Questions

You can submit by mail to your county tax collector's motor vehicle division. Mail the notarized HSMV 82101, a copy of your photo ID, and a check or money order for the fees. Allow 2–4 weeks for mail processing. In-person is faster (often same-day) and avoids the risk of a rejected submission requiring back-and-forth by mail.

A duplicate title is only issued to the recorded owner on the title. If the home was informally transferred (a handshake deal with no paperwork), you'll need to first establish the legal transfer before you can get any title documents. The prior owner needs to be located to sign transfer documents — or if they're deceased, an estate process must be followed. A duplicate title application in your name will be rejected if you're not the recorded owner.

No. The park owns the land and your lease agreement is separate from the DHSMV title. The park has no right to hold, control, or withhold your title documents. Your title is a state document between you and DHSMV. The park's only connection to the title process might be that they need to provide an address for the home on your forms, or that you notify them of ownership changes per your lease agreement.

Technically, you can apply for a duplicate and sell simultaneously, but a buyer should never close without seeing the title. Any reputable buyer will require the duplicate title before paying — and correctly so. Apply for the duplicate first, receive it, then proceed with the sale. Plan this into your timeline; the duplicate takes at least a few days in-person and potentially several weeks by mail.

If the home is being scrapped or removed from its site entirely, you should cancel (void) the title with DHSMV to avoid future property tax assessments and to remove it from the county records. This is separate from the insurance claim process. Contact your county tax collector to initiate a "mobile home retirement" or title cancellation. You'll need the title (or a duplicate if lost), plus documentation of the home's removal or destruction.

Disclaimer This guide is for informational purposes only. DHSMV forms, fees, and county procedures change periodically. Always verify current requirements with your local county tax collector or DHSMV at flhsmv.gov before filing. For complex situations, consult a Florida attorney.

Related: Florida Complete Title Guide · Remove a Lien · Unresponsive Lender Guide · Find Your Transfer Path