anyone have a carfax account? My daughter is looking at a car on craigslist would like to run a VIN
thanks
thanks
Thanks!!sienna said:When a insurance company pays out a claim larger than a certain amount or pays direct to a autobody..it's recorded more likely. However when an private individual takes the insurance cash and fixes his/her car at a later time or not at all, it is often not recorded into the title of the car.
Because you as the insured are paid for your loses, it is your right to repair or leave it like a pile (pos). And since they don't know when or if the work was performed, it would not be recorded. Carfax relies on a car autobody shop's software made by "Mitchell", DMV records and CLUE reports (insurance claims data).
Yes, although the original car is not worth fixing it still has some value. That value can be recovered, which is why the term "salvage" is used.grandmama said:My understanding is that when it cost more for the insurance to pay for the fix, then the car becomes "salvage"
The insurance company owns it - the insured vehicle owner is not entitled to a complete replacement and the original car, the replacement payment is... a replacement. Some owners buy the wreck from the insurance company, paying the salvage value, because it has value to them (for parts or complete rebuilding), but that's an additional transaction.grandmama said:Most of the time, the insurance will pay the owner $X (fair market value) of the wrecked car so he/she can go buy another car. So at that point, who owns that piece of wrecked? Will the insurance company tow it away? Allow the owner keeps it?
No, it isn't worthless, it has salvage value (for instance, it could be torn down and the remaining good parts sold for a substantial amount). If a $30,000 car is so damaged that the remains are worth $10,000 and it would cost $25,000 to fix, it makes more sense for the insurance company to pay the insured $30,000 (and recover $10,000 of that by selling the damaged car to a wrecker, leaving a net cost to the insurance company of $20,000) than to pay $25,000 to fix the damaged car. Yes, the insurance company has paid $30,000 to the owner, but that doesn't mean someone else is entitled to get the wreck (worth $10,000 as a pile of parts) for nothing! The insurance company must salvage that value for the replace-instead-of-fix decision to make sense.grandmama said:Now, for buyer, if they buy car with rebuilt/salvage title, the car should have $0 value to begin with, right? (because insurance already paid for a new ride to the owner). So the so call seller is making a lot even they always list the car lower than anyone else?
This would vary significantly by jurisdiction (state or province), but I agree. I have heard that here (Alberta) if a vehicle's title carries the corresponding designation, a very extensive inspection is required to even get it licensed again; I found a Salvage Vehicle Inspections page from our provincial government which confirms this. Here, the repaired vehicle would not simply have a "salvage" status, but would be registered as "rebuilt".topspy said:It may also be difficult to get a "salvage-titled" vehicle re-insured.
If the repair is done by (or for) the owner at the time of the damage, then it could have a title document which still says nothing is wrong, even though it had been damaged, registered as salvage, and repaired. A search for the title as officially registered - not just a look at the printed document which may be with the vehicle - would be the only way to detect this.topspy said:You should always ask about and see the title.....especially in a private-party transaction.
I agree. It may even harder to get a loan.brian_bp said:I would not be at all surprised if my insurer declined to carry the vehicle.topspy said:It may also be difficult to get a "salvage-titled" vehicle re-insured.
same....I'd be wary. You just "never know".grandmama said:I agree. It may even harder to get a loan.brian_bp said:I would not be at all surprised if my insurer declined to carry the vehicle.topspy said:It may also be difficult to get a "salvage-titled" vehicle re-insured.
So what about "thief", "repo"? any idea?
In this case, I think that the Carfax information is helpful. Someone leasing a vehicle may tend to keep mileage down, if they are charged for excess mileage in the lease agreement.rainman said:I used Carfax prior to buying my used 01 Sienna, I mainly wanted to know why a 10 yr old
vehicle had such low mileage(74,700). It listed 2 previous owners, the 1st was a 4yr lease and the
second owner bought the van outright(financed it).