Nevada Express Title Loans is a single-location, storefront-only title lending company operating in Las Vegas, Nevada, at 1514 S. Eastern Ave. near the Eastern and Oakey intersection. The business markets itself on speed and professionalism, branding its service as "Express" to differentiate from larger chain lenders. It operates as an independent local operator rather than a national franchise, serving the Las Vegas community with an emphasis on same-day cash access.
The company's core product is a vehicle title loan — a secured short-term loan in which borrowers pledge a lien-free car title as collateral in exchange for immediate cash. Borrowers retain use of their vehicle throughout the entire loan term. To qualify, applicants must be Nevada residents and present a lien-free title, current vehicle registration and insurance, a qualifying ID, proof of income, and one utility bill. The vehicle is physically inspected at the time of application. The advertised starting interest rate is 7.95%, though the website does not publish a full rate range, maximum APR, fee schedule, or loan term details.
Nevada Express Title Loans offers bilingual service in English and Spanish and explicitly accepts Matricula Consular ID — the consular identification card issued by Mexican consulates — which meaningfully expands access to non-citizen borrowers who are typically excluded from mainstream lending. This combination of language accessibility and ID flexibility positions the lender as a deliberate resource for Las Vegas's Latino community. One published customer testimonial praises the company for offering "the lowest interest rates…and great customer service."
As a single in-store location, Nevada Express Title Loans is geographically limited to Las Vegas-area Nevada residents — there is no online-only application or multi-state service. The 7.95% figure is advertised as a starting rate only; the actual rate for a given borrower is not disclosed in advance on the website. Title loans carry a meaningful risk of vehicle repossession if payments are missed, a risk that is not prominently disclosed on the homepage. Borrowers who have access to credit union PALs, employer salary advances, or any personal loan under 36% APR should exhaust those lower-risk options before using a title loan.