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Car Title Loans in El Cajon, California - El Cajon 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 El Cajon, CA 92019.

El Cajon, California 92019
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
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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.


El Cajon Car Title Loans

About El Cajon

El Cajon is a city in San Diego County, California. The population was 99,478 at the 2010 census and grew to 100,116 in 2011. Nestled in a valley surrounded by mountains, the city has acquired the nickname of "The Big Box". Its name originated similarly, from the Spanish phrase "el cajón", which means "the big box" or "the drawer".

El Cajón, the Spanish word for "box", was first recorded on September 10, 1821, as an alternative name for sitio rancho Santa Mónica, describing the "boxed in" nature of the valley in which it sat. The name appeared on maps in 1873 and 1875 as shortened to just "Cajon" until the modern town developed where the post office was named "Elcajon." In 1905, the name was once again expanded to "El Cajon" when California banker and historian, Zoeth Skinner Eldredge, insisted that the words be separated.

During Spanish rule (1769-1821), the government encouraged settlement of territory now known as California by the establishment of large land grants called ranchos, from which the English word ranch is derived. Land grants were made to the Roman Catholic Church which set up numerous missions throughout the region. In the early nineteenth century, mission padres' search for pasture land led them to the El Cajon Valley. Surrounding foothills served as a barrier to straying cattle and a watershed to gather the sparse rainfall. For years, the pasture lands of El Cajon supported the cattle herds of the mission and its native Indian converts.

It was not until the Mexican era (1821–1846) that titles to plots of land were granted to individuals. The original intent of the 1834 secularization legislation was to have church property divided among the former mission Indians. However, most of the grants were actually made to rich 'Californios' of Spanish background who had long been casting envious eyes on the vast holdings of the Roman Catholic Missions. In 1845 California Governor Pio Pico confiscated the lands of Mission San Diego de Alcala. He granted eleven square leagues (about 48,800-acres, 197km2) of the El Cajon Valley to Dona Maria Antonio Estudillo, daughter of José Antonio Estudillo, alcalde of San Diego, to repay a $500 government obligation. The grant was originally called Rancho Santa Monica and encompassed present day El Cajon, Bostonia, Santee, Lakeside, Flinn Springs, and the eastern part of La Mesa. It also contained the 28-acre (0.11 km2) Rancho Cañada de los Coches grant. Maria Estudillo was the wife of Don Miguel Pedrorena (1808–1850), a native of Madrid, Spain, who had come to California from Peru in 1838 to operate a trading business.

With the cession of California to the United States following the Mexican-American War, the 1848 Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo provided that the land grants would be honored. As required by the Land Act of 1851, a claim for Rancho El Cajon was filed by Thomas W. Sutherland, guardian of Pedrorena's heirs (his son, Miguel, and his three daughters, Victoria, Ysabel and Elenain) with the Public Land Commission in 1852, confirmed by the U.S. Supreme Court, and the grant was patented in 1876. In 1868, Los Angeles land developer Isaac Lankershim bought the bulk of the Pedrorena's Rancho El Cajon holdings, employing Major Levi Chase, a former Union Army officer, as his agent. Chase received from Lankershim 7,624 acres (30.9 km2) known as the Chase Ranch. Lankershim hired Amaziah Lord Knox (1833-1918), a New Englander whom he had met in San Francisco, to manage Rancho El Cajon. In 1876, Knox established a hotel there to serve the growing number of people traveling between San Diego and Julian, where gold had been discovered in 1869. Room and board for a guest and horse cost $1 a night. The area became known as Knox's Corners and was later renamed. By 1878there were 25 families living in the valley and a portion of the hotel lobby became the valley post office with Knox as the first postmaster.

El Cajon was incorporated as a city in 1912. A portion of the western boundary of the city follows the eastern boundary of a similar land grant, made under Spanish law (prior to Mexican independence) to the Mission San Diego de Alcala.

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