07-09-2007, 10:20 AM
I just got a CARFAX on my 968. Interesting results...
The car has been hit twice in the last three years (very frustrating to say the least). A Nissan Pathfinder backed into me in a parking lot in 2005 causing about $3,000 damage to the right rear and last winter an old Ford rear-ended me causing about $1,000 of damage to the rear bumper. Only the rear-ender was reported to the police, who happened to pull up just after it happened -and wound up arresting the poor illegal immigrant driving the car on an outstanding warrant. Surprisingly, he had current insurance!.
Only one of these accidents is on the CARFAX report - the one that has a police report. This confirms what I have suspected for years, going back to when I worked as a car salesman: CARFAX does not access insurance company databases.
What does that mean for the car-buying public? A recent CARFAX report is no guarantee that a car has not had significant accident damage. It just provides part of the picture. Only an experienced appraiser who knows how to look for evidence of paint and repair can say for certain whether a car has been in an accident or not.
Does this mean a CARFAX is useless? Absolutely not! But dealerships will trot them out on a used car deal as proof the car has never been damaged. They may even honestly believe it...
The car has been hit twice in the last three years (very frustrating to say the least). A Nissan Pathfinder backed into me in a parking lot in 2005 causing about $3,000 damage to the right rear and last winter an old Ford rear-ended me causing about $1,000 of damage to the rear bumper. Only the rear-ender was reported to the police, who happened to pull up just after it happened -and wound up arresting the poor illegal immigrant driving the car on an outstanding warrant. Surprisingly, he had current insurance!.
Only one of these accidents is on the CARFAX report - the one that has a police report. This confirms what I have suspected for years, going back to when I worked as a car salesman: CARFAX does not access insurance company databases.
What does that mean for the car-buying public? A recent CARFAX report is no guarantee that a car has not had significant accident damage. It just provides part of the picture. Only an experienced appraiser who knows how to look for evidence of paint and repair can say for certain whether a car has been in an accident or not.
Does this mean a CARFAX is useless? Absolutely not! But dealerships will trot them out on a used car deal as proof the car has never been damaged. They may even honestly believe it...
(This post was last modified: 07-09-2007, 02:16 PM by RPM.)

