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Car Title Loans in Lancaster, California - Lancaster Truck and Auto Title Loans Specialist.

Do you need fast cash? If your car is paid off or almost paid off you can use the equity in your car to get a car title loan with a 2 minute approval.* Freeway Car Title Loans serves the Lancaster, CA 93534.

Lancaster, California 93534
Phone: 844-643-6192

We are here to help folks like you get emergency cash for medical care, rent or whatever you need it. You do not have to give up jewelry, personal collections or any other personal property to get your loan. Just have a car that you own outright as this will be your collateral and you can get your cash the same day you request it. And, you get to keep your car and continue driving it.

Need immediate cash? Contact us now!
Toll Free 1(844) 643-6192
Available 7 Days a Week 9am to 9pm
2 MINUTE APPROVAL*
APPLY NOW! 2 Minute Approval*
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It's Painless, Quick and Reasonable

What is it about Freeway Car Title Loans that have people rushing to us to get emergency cash?

  • Get approved for your loan in as little as 2 minutes or even less* in some cases
  • Approval is fast, painless and without endless paperwork
  • Bad credit is no obstacle
  • Reasonable and generous repayment terms
  • We do autos, atvs, trucks, boats, motorcycles & RVs
  • Competitive rates

We make the approval process fast and easy. No one wants the pressure and anxiety from wondering how certain expenses will be paid, especially if you need the money now.

GET EMERGENCY CASH IN MINUTES - KEEP YOUR CAR TO DRIVE

Call or go online right now to Freeway Car Title Loans and find out how easy it is to get the extra cash you need to meet whatever predicament you are in. Within minutes, one of our agents will call you to discuss how you can get your cash quickly and easily. We can also refinance any current car title loans for you at better rates in many cases! Call us today toll free 1-844-643-6192.

Why Wait? Call Us Now!

Have one of our friendly Freeway Car Title Loans representatives talk to you about what you need to get your cash. Any paperwork you need is probably within arms distance from you. If the bank or other lenders are reluctant to give you a loan, it is reassuring to know that Freeway Car Title Loans is here. Be sure you can make the monthly payments, however, or risk losing your car. Because we do no credit checks, your credit history will not be affected if this unfortunate circumstance does occur.

What is the APR for Freeway Title Loan's Gold Program?

The APR for the Gold Program is 35.99% APR for all qualifying customers, meeting all necessary criteria (including a FICO score of 600 or greater) as stated below. Loan amounts start at $5,500.00 with a term of 24 to 44 months. Most Gold Program loans will be charged an administration fee (origination fee) in an amount ranging from $262.00 up to 5% of the amount financed.

A typical Gold Program loan of $7,500.00 with a 35.99% APR and a 38 month term, the payment is $333.73 and the total scheduled interest is $4,731.74. The interest on the loan may vary depending upon the timing of the payments made. There is no prepayment penalty. However, the administration fee (origination fee) is not refundable.


Lancaster Car Title Loans

About Lancaster

Lancaster is a charter city in northern Los Angeles County, in the Antelope Valley of the western Mojave Desert in Southern California. Lancaster currently ranks as the 30th largest city in California, and the 148th largest city in the United States. Lancaster is the principal city within the Antelope Valley.

Lancaster is located approximately 70 miles (110 km) north (by highway) of Downtown Los Angeles, near the Kern County line. It is separated from the Los Angeles Basin by the San Gabriel Mountains to the south, and from Bakersfield and the San Joaquin Valley by the Tehachapi Mountains to the north.

The population of Lancaster has grown from 37,000 residents at the time of incorporation in 1977, to 156,633 people as of the 2010 census, which makes it the largest city on the California side of the Mojave Desert. According to the Greater Antelope Valley Economic Alliance report of 2009 the Palmdale / Lancaster, CA Urbanized Area (a US Census Bureau defined term) has a population of 483,997.

The area in which the city of Lancaster is now located, which is now known as the Antelope Valley, was originally home to the Piute Indians. Lancaster's origins as a settlement start with the Southern Pacific Railroad, which is believed to first use the name 'Lancaster', where a station house, locomotive watering facilities and section gang housing were built when the railroad laid track through the town's future location. By September of that year, SP had completed the main line through the Antelope Valley, linking San Francisco and Los Angeles. The origin of Lancaster's name is unclear, attributed variously to the surname of a railroad station clerk, the moniker given by railroad officials, or the former Pennsylvania home (Lancaster, Pennsylvania of unknown settlers. Train service brought passengers through the water-stop-turned-community, which, with the help of promotional literature, attracted new settlers. The person credited with formally developing the town is Moses Langley Wicks, who in 1884 bought property from the railroad for $2.50 per acre, mapped out a town with streets and lots, and by September was advertising 160-acre tracts of land for $6 an acre. The following year, the Lancaster News started publication, making it the first weekly newspaper in the Antelope Valley. By 1890, Lancaster was bustling and booming, and thanks to adequate rainfall, farmers planted and sold thousands of acres of wheat and barley.

The town was devastated by the decade-long drought that began in 1894, killing businesses and driving cattle north, though fortunes improved somewhat in 1898 following the nearby discoveries of gold and borax, the latter to become a widespread industrial chemical and household cleaner. Thanks to the five-year construction of the 233-mile Los Angeles Aqueduct starting in 1908, Lancaster became a boom town by housing aqueduct workers. The 1912 completion of Antelope Valley Union High School allowed students from the growing region to study locally instead of moving to distant cities, and the school boasted the state's first dormitory system to accommodate students from outlying districts. For seven years starting in 1926, a young Judy Garland-then still Frances "Baby" Gumm-lived in Lancaster and honed her skills as a child singer, dancer, and entertainer before going on to become one of Lancaster's most famous residents. The community began a steady growth spurt in the 1930s, starting with construction of Muroc Air Force Base, site of frequent flight tests, including the "breaking" of the sound barrier by Chuck Yeager in a Bell X-1A in 1947. in the 1980s through the end of the program,Edwards Air Force Base, by then renamed, hosted a limited number of landings of the Space Shuttle. The development of Air Force Plant 42 in 1958, augmented in the 1960s by construction of Lockheed Aircraft's Plant 10, created tens of thousands of jobs. High-wage employment hit its peak in the 1970s during the Lockheed L-1011 project, for which all assembly and some engineering and parts production were performed. Lancaster was an unincorporated community in Los Angeles County until 1977, when it was incorporated as a city, with Arnold Rodio serving as its first mayor.

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