The complete CARFAX guide (2026)
CARFAX is the most-recognized name in US vehicle history reports. It is also one of the most expensive (€38,64 per single report at retail) and the most-faked. This page is the complete buyer-side guide: what a CARFAX actually shows you, what the federal database it pulls from is called, who else sells the same data for €4,29 to $9.99, how to spot a forged CARFAX a seller might show you, and which alternative is right for which buyer.
Check this VIN — same NMVTIS data, €4,29
Federal title-brand, odometer, accident + auction records — instant in-browser, dated today.
What CARFAX actually is (and what it is not)
CARFAX is a private company headquartered in Centreville, Virginia, owned by IHS Markit (now part of S&P Global). It sells PDF reports that aggregate vehicle data from several sources: the federal NMVTIS database (operated by the US Department of Justice), state DMV title-brand registries, insurance carriers, police accident reports, dealership service records, and public auction houses. Critically — every other major vehicle-history report provider (AutoCheck, VinAudit, EpicVIN, our service, and roughly two dozen NMVTIS-authorized data providers) accesses the same federal NMVTIS feed CARFAX does. The data that matters most for a used-car buyer — title brands, total-loss records, odometer history, accident reports, auction history — is essentially identical across all reputable providers. CARFAX's price premium reflects brand recognition, dealer-channel relationships, and some proprietary dealership service-record data on top of the federal feed.
What a CARFAX report shows you
A current CARFAX (and every NMVTIS-direct alternative) reports the following per VIN:
- Title history with state-by-state ownership transfers — every US state the vehicle has been registered in and when. Frequent state changes (4+ states in 10 years on a non-fleet vehicle) is the title-washing warning sign.
- Title brands per jurisdiction — SALVAGE, REBUILT, FLOOD, LEMON, MANUFACTURER BUYBACK, ODOMETER ROLLOVER, JUNK, NON-REPAIRABLE, and state-specific equivalents. Any brand caps resale value 40-60% below clean.
- Odometer readings with dates — every reading recorded by DMV at title transfer, dealership service appointments, and inspection (smog, safety) events. A decreasing reading is rollback fraud.
- Total-loss insurance claims — when an insurer paid out as a total loss, even if the title was later rebuilt and re-issued as clean in a less-strict state.
- Reported accident records — police reports filed and insurance claims with damage payouts. Granularity varies by state and insurer but includes damage location (front, rear, side, undercarriage) and severity classification.
- Auction history — Copart, IAAI, Manheim sales records when present. Copart/IAAI presence is the strongest single salvage signal even if the current title is "clean" through title washing.
- Open recalls — NHTSA-issued safety recalls the prior owner did not complete. Resolving these becomes the new owner's responsibility.
- Service history at participating dealerships and shops — oil changes, brake jobs, transmission service, recall completions. This is the data layer that distinguishes CARFAX from cheaper NMVTIS-direct providers; the underlying title and odometer data is identical across all.
How much does a CARFAX report actually cost?
CARFAX retail pricing in 2026: €38,64 for one report, $79.99 for three (≈ $26.66 each), $99.99 for five (≈ $20 each), $39.99/month subscription for unlimited reports across a 30-day window. The single-report price has not changed materially since 2010 despite the underlying federal NMVTIS data being available to authorized providers for a wholesale cost in the $0.50-$2.00 range. The retail premium funds brand-recognition advertising, dealer-channel sales, and the proprietary dealership service-record layer. For a buyer evaluating ONE car, the meaningful comparison is €38,64 (CARFAX) vs €4,29-$9.99 (NMVTIS-direct alternatives) for the same federal title/odometer/accident data.
CARFAX alternatives that pull the same NMVTIS data
Every report below pulls from NMVTIS — the same federal database CARFAX uses. The title-brand, odometer, accident, and auction data is identical. They differ in dealership service records, in dealer-channel pricing, and in the report PDF layout.
AutoCheck (by Experian) — €25,76 single, $44.99 unlimited 30-day
The Experian-owned competitor to CARFAX. Uses the same NMVTIS source plus Experian's separate auction-data layer. Slightly cheaper than CARFAX single-report price. Includes a proprietary numeric "AutoCheck Score" that grades the vehicle 1-100 — useful as a consistency check, not as a substitute for reading the underlying records. Best for dealers and frequent buyers because of the unlimited-month option.
VIN Info Hub — €4,29 single report
Our service. Direct NMVTIS-authorized data provider. Same federal title-brand, odometer, accident, and auction records CARFAX uses, delivered in your browser (no PDF the seller can edit and re-share). €4,29 per VIN. Best for buyers checking 1-3 cars; the price is the cheapest direct-NMVTIS access available in 2026.
VinAudit — $9.99 single, $19.99 for 5
Direct NMVTIS-authorized provider. Same underlying federal data. Pricing sits between us and CARFAX. Includes a value-estimation feature derived from market data. Best for buyers who want a middle-tier provider with brand recognition slightly above ours.
EpicVIN — $14.99 single
NMVTIS-direct provider. Same federal data. Newer entrant with strong UX. Slightly more expensive than VinAudit but bundles features (vehicle specs decoder, market value) into the same report.
NHTSA Recall Lookup — free
The US National Highway Traffic Safety Administration's official recall-only search. Covers open recalls per VIN but does NOT include title brands, accidents, or auction history. Useful as a free supplement to a paid history report, not a replacement.
CARFAX vs AutoCheck — which to choose
Direct head-to-head: CARFAX has slightly more granular dealership service records (more independent shops report to it) and the larger brand-recognition footprint with private sellers (sellers more likely to have a CARFAX than an AutoCheck on hand). AutoCheck has stronger auction-data integration (Experian owns major auction-data feeds) and the unlimited-month subscription that frequent buyers prefer. For a one-time private-party purchase, CARFAX is marginally more valuable. For dealers or buyers evaluating 5+ vehicles per month, AutoCheck wins on price. For the buyer-side checking one specific car against the seller's claims, NMVTIS-direct providers (us, VinAudit, EpicVIN) give the same title and accident data for 80-90% less.
"Free CARFAX" offers and forged reports — what to watch out for
Two scams target buyers who want CARFAX data without paying retail. First — fake "free CARFAX" sites that look like the real carfax.com but redirect to malware, harvest credit-card information, or simply serve a randomly-generated bogus report. CARFAX does not offer free reports to consumers; "free CARFAX" usually means a dealer's paid report that they show you as part of their sales pitch (legitimate but limited to vehicles the dealer is selling). Second — forged CARFAX PDFs sold in underground forums for $20-50 that look exactly like real ones to anyone who has not seen many. Sellers use these to mask salvage, flood, or rollback history. The reliable defense: pull a fresh report yourself, on the VIN you are looking at, dated TODAY, from any NMVTIS-direct provider — the federal data is the source of truth, not the seller's PDF.
When CARFAX is worth €38,64 — and when it isn't
Worth it: (a) when the dealership service records on this specific car would change your decision (high-end car with documented preventive maintenance), (b) when the seller is a dealer and you want the same data CARFAX brand-recognition gives you in any future resale, (c) when you have an existing CARFAX subscription and the marginal report is effectively free. Not worth it: (a) when you just need title-brand + accident + odometer data (use a €4,29 NMVTIS-direct provider), (b) when a seller is giving you a "free" CARFAX (pull your own; theirs may be stale or fake), (c) when you are evaluating 3+ cars and the total CARFAX cost exceeds the price difference of buying the wrong car after a thorough inspection.
Run a real, current NMVTIS report on any VIN now
Enter the 17-character VIN below. We pull the same federal NMVTIS data CARFAX uses — title brands, odometer history, total-loss records, accident claims, auction history, open recalls — delivered in your browser, dated today, for €4,29. Verifiable and impossible for the seller to have forged because you ran it yourself.