One VIN Number. Zero Surprises.

Run a VIN number check on any used car, truck, or SUV sold in the world. Every 17-digit VIN number connects to a chain of state DMV records, insurance filings, federal recall notices, and auction history that follows the vehicle regardless of how many times it changes hands.

💥 Accident History 🔢 Odometer Fraud 🔔 Safety Recalls 📜 Title Issues 🚔 Stolen Check 💧 Flood & Fire Damage
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VIN number checks and counting
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Fraud monitoring
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How a VIN check actually works

All you need is the VIN number.

1

Find the VIN

Check the dashboard near the windshield, the driver's side door jamb, or your insurance documents. It's always exactly 17 characters.
2

Run the Check

Enter the VIN above. We pull records from government databases, insurance filings, and inspection registries. Results come back in under 30 seconds.
3

Make Your Call

You\'ll see accidents, title brands, recall alerts, and full odometer history. Enough to know whether to buy, negotiate, or walk.

What every VIN check covers

What the report includes.

Accident & Collision Records
Every reported crash, where it happened and when, pulled from insurance and police files
Full Odometer Timeline
All mileage readings logged over the vehicle lifetime, flagged if they do not add up
Open Safety Recalls
Current NHTSA alerts tied to this VIN that have not been repaired yet
Title Brands
Salvage, flood, lemon law, and total loss designations recorded on the title
Theft & Recovery Status
Run against national stolen vehicle registries to confirm clean status
Lien & Ownership History
How many owners, and whether any outstanding loans are attached to the title
Structural Damage
Frame and body damage from repair shop reports and insurance filings
Airbag Deployment Records
Any airbag activations tied to this VIN, with incident context where available
Inspection History
State safety inspection results logged over the vehicle registration history
Emissions Data
Emissions test outcomes from state records, where that data is available
Total Loss Records
Cases where an insurer declared the vehicle a write-off rather than repair it
Prior Vehicle Use
Whether the car spent time as a rental, fleet unit, taxi, or at a salvage auction

There are over 50 million vehicles in the system right now. We draw from 110 different databases, including state DMV offices, NHTSA, insurance filings, and auction records. The data gets updated every day, so a report you run this afternoon will not be missing last week's filings.

Accounts from buyers who ran a check before purchase

★★★★★

"Bought a 2018 F-150 last spring. Dealer had it listed as a one-owner work truck, clean title. I almost skipped the VIN check because the price seemed fair. Ran it anyway: two insurance claims from 2020 and 2021, both collision, plus a lien that hadn't been cleared. Walked out. Found a cleaner truck two weeks later for about the same money."

Marcus T., Texas
★★★★★

"My uncle sold cars for 20 years. He always said check the VIN before you fall in love with the vehicle. I didn't listen on my first used car. Did it properly the second time. The check flagged a flood history the seller hadn't brought up. Easy decision after that."

Jennifer R., Ohio
★★★★★

"I work in property management and buy used trucks for the business every couple years. Started running VIN checks after one of my guys got stuck with a van that kept showing warning lights nobody could explain. History showed it had been in a fire. Now I check everything before we even go look at it in person."

David K., Florida

VIN check by manufacturer

Select a manufacturer for model-specific VIN data, known issues, and history tips.

In 2023, the National Insurance Crime Bureau recorded more than 1.02 million vehicle thefts in the United States, the highest total in nearly two decades. A significant portion of those vehicles were eventually recovered, retitled, and fed back into the used car market. Some came with clean paperwork. The buyers who found out what they had purchased did so after the fact, when a mechanic pulled up the history or a resale attempt surfaced the original theft record. A VIN number check run before the sale would have shown the same thing in under a minute.

The used vehicle market in the United States processes roughly 40 million transactions per year, according to data compiled by Cox Automotive. Every one of those vehicles carries a 17-character identifier that links it to a chain of title records, registration filings, insurance claims, and federal recall notices. The information exists. It is distributed across state DMV databases, the National Motor Vehicle Title Information System, NHTSA recall records, and salvage auction logs maintained by insurance carriers. What a VIN check does is pull those sources together against a single number. Odometer readings filed at each state registration event show whether the mileage on the dashboard matches the mileage on file. Title brands issued after flood events, fire damage, or total-loss declarations follow the vehicle regardless of how many times it changes hands or crosses state lines. Accident reports filed by insurance adjusters attach to the VIN at the time the claim is processed, not at the time the owner decides to disclose them.

The vehicles that generate the most VIN check activity are not the obvious candidates. Pickup trucks, particularly full-size models from domestic manufacturers, account for a disproportionate share of both theft records and structural damage claims in the national databases. Late-model SUVs returning from rental fleets carry commercial use histories that their odometer readings do not fully explain. Luxury imports from Germany and the United Kingdom show up in VIN records with European damage history that predates their US title registration, because insurers in those markets file claims that eventually surface in American databases when the vehicle is imported and registered. Dealers operating at the retail level are required by federal law to disclose known defects, but the law does not require them to run a history report before they buy a vehicle at auction. The gap between what a seller is required to say and what a VIN check will show is where most of the findings live.

Common questions

A VIN (short for Vehicle Identification Number) is a 17-character code assigned to every vehicle built after 1981. It encodes the manufacturer, country of origin, vehicle type, and a production serial number unique to that car. No two vehicles share the same VIN.
The report pulls accident and collision records, odometer history, title brands like salvage or flood damage, open recall alerts from NHTSA, theft and recovery records, lien and ownership data, and structural damage reports, among other data points.
Records come from 100+ sources: NMVTIS, the NHTSA recall database, insurance industry filings, state DMV records, and inspection registries. Coverage varies by state and vehicle age, but most vehicles registered after 1990 have substantial history on file.
About 30 seconds. Enter the VIN and the report is generated in real time. No waiting for email delivery.
A clean report means no incidents were formally reported to the databases we query. Some accidents do go unreported. A VIN check is one layer of due diligence. Pair it with an independent inspection for full peace of mind.