Car Facts Report — The Real Facts, by VIN.
You don't need a brand name — you need the facts. Enter the 17-character VIN below and we pull the documented car facts in seconds: title-brand status, reported accidents, odometer readings, theft status, and open recalls. The title-brand facts and recalls are free; the full facts are one click away. No account, no credit card.
Run a Free Car Facts Report
Enter the 17-character VIN and we'll return the title-brand facts, open recalls, and decoded specs instantly — then unlock the full facts if you need them.
Free · No sign-up · Instant car facts report
Quick Answer
- What is a car facts report?
- A car facts reportis a plain-language name for a VIN-based vehicle history report — the documented facts about a used car: its title-brand status, reported accidents, odometer readings, theft status, and open recalls. People search “car facts” when they want the underlying facts, not a particular brand. CarCheckerVIN gives you those facts free by VIN.
- Is a car facts report the same as Carfax?
- No — “car facts report” is a generic phrase for a vehicle history report, while Carfaxis one specific paid brand. Any reputable report draws the core facts from the same sources: NMVTIS for title brands, NHTSA for recalls, the NICB for theft. CarCheckerVIN returns those facts free, with a full report at $14.99 versus Carfax's $44.99.
- Can I get a free car facts report?
- Yes. The report on this page returns the title-brand facts, open recalls, and decoded specs for free by VIN, with no account and no credit card. The full report — every reported accident, the complete odometer timeline, and the full ownership chain — is a one-time $14.99, a fraction of Carfax's $44.99.
The Facts a Car Facts Report Gives You
Six sets of documented facts, all pulled from the same 17-character VIN.
The title-brand facts
The report pulls the car's title records from NMVTIS across all 50 states and states the plain fact of any Salvage, Junk, Rebuilt, Flood, Lemon, or Non-repairable brand. A brand is a permanent, documented fact — the single most important one in any car facts report, because it changes value, insurability, and safety.
The accident facts
The report surfaces the facts of reported collisions, structural repairs, airbag deployments, and insurance total-loss records tied to the VIN. The free tier states whether accident records exist; the full report lays out each event with dates and severity, so the facts are on the table before you negotiate.
The odometer facts
The report presents the mileage facts captured at every title transfer and inspection, so a rollback — the documented drop or implausible jump — is a fact you can see rather than a claim you have to trust. Odometer fraud is a federal crime that inflates price and hides real wear.
The theft & recall facts
The report cross-checks the VIN against the NICB stolen-vehicle database and the live NHTSA recall feed, so the facts of whether the car is reported stolen and whether an open safety recall still needs a free repair are stated plainly, not left for you to discover later.
The ownership facts
The report lays out how many owners the car has had and how the title moved between states — the factual chain where title washing hides. A documented string of quick interstate transfers is a fact worth weighing even when the current title reads clean.
The spec facts
The report decodes the 17-character VIN into the factual year, make, model, trim, engine, and assembly plant, so you can confirm the car matches the VIN and the seller's listing — the first fact to verify against a cloned VIN or a mis-advertised car.
How to Get a Car Facts Report
Find the 17-character VIN
Read the VIN from the lower driver-side corner of the windshield, the driver-side door-jamb sticker, the title, the registration, or the insurance card. Confirm it is 17 characters with no letters I, O, or Q — those never appear in a real VIN.
Enter the VIN and pull the facts
Type or paste the VIN into the form on this page. We validate the format, including the ninth-position check digit, then compile the car facts from NMVTIS title records, the NHTSA recall feed, and the VIN decoder in seconds.
Read the title-brand fact first
Start with the title-brand line — the most consequential single fact in the report — then review the accident and odometer facts. Together these tell you most of what you need to know about whether a car is worth pursuing.
Unlock the full facts if you need them
If the free report raises a flag or you want every documented fact before you buy, unlock the $14.99 report for every reported accident, the entire odometer timeline, and the full ownership chain, with a downloadable PDF — still well below Carfax's $44.99.
Get the Car Facts Now
Title-brand facts, open recalls, and decoded specs — instantly and free. Full accident and ownership facts one click away.
Free Car Facts vs Full Paid Report
The free facts screen out obvious problem cars before you spend a cent. The paid report lays out every documented fact to negotiate and decide. Here is exactly where the line falls.
Free car facts
- Title-brand status facts
- Open NHTSA safety recalls
- Decoded specs — year, make, model, engine
- Whether accident & salvage records exist
- No account, no card, instant
Full report — $14.99
- Every fact in the free report
- Complete list of reported accidents & damage
- Every captured odometer reading
- Full ownership & title-transfer chain
- Auction & salvage records + downloadable PDF
One-time $14.99 — a fraction of Carfax's $44.99. No subscription.
Looking for the Carfax brand specifically? The facts are the same — see how the two compare on alternatives to Carfax, or get the full breakdown on the car history report page.
More Ways to Get the Facts
The car facts report is the full view. These focused pages cover the decoder, the free tier, and how it compares.
Always check the VIN before you buy
Our free report reveals accidents, title brands, odometer rollback, theft records, and open recalls in seconds.
Car Facts Report — Frequently Asked Questions
The questions buyers ask most when they look up the facts on a used car.
What is a car facts report?+
A car facts report is a plain-language name for a VIN-based vehicle history report — a summary of the documented facts about a used car, compiled from its unique 17-character VIN. It aggregates the records indexed to that VIN: the title and brand facts (Salvage, Junk, Rebuilt, Flood, Lemon, Non-repairable) from NMVTIS, reported accidents and insurance total-loss records, odometer readings captured over the car's life, stolen-vehicle status from the NICB, open safety recalls from NHTSA, and the decoded factory specifications. People often type 'car facts' when what they really want are the underlying facts about a specific car rather than any one brand. The free car facts report on this page returns the title-brand facts, open recalls, and specs; the full report adds the detailed accident, odometer, and ownership records.
Is a car facts report the same thing as Carfax?+
No. 'Car facts report' is a generic description of a vehicle history report, while Carfax is a specific commercial brand — the two are easy to confuse because the brand name is literally the words 'car' and 'facts' joined together. The important point is that no single brand owns the core facts: title-brand history is centralized in NMVTIS, a federal database every legitimate provider draws from, recalls come from NHTSA, and theft status comes from the NICB. That means CarCheckerVIN and Carfax report the same core facts about a car; the differences are price and presentation. CarCheckerVIN returns the key facts free and charges $14.99 for the full report versus Carfax's $44.99.
Can I get a free car facts report?+
Yes. The car facts report on this page is free, with no sign-up and no credit card. You get the title-brand facts, open NHTSA recalls, and decoded factory specs at no cost, because NMVTIS and NHTSA data are available through approved providers. A full car facts report is a one-time $14.99 — well under the $44.99 a single Carfax report costs — and adds every reported accident, the complete odometer timeline, and the full ownership and title chain as a downloadable PDF. Be cautious of any site that advertises a 'free car facts report' but demands a credit card before it shows you a single fact.
What facts does a car facts report include?+
A complete car facts report includes six sets of facts. First, the title-brand facts from NMVTIS across all 50 states. Second, reported accidents, structural-damage repairs, airbag deployments, and insurance total-loss records. Third, the odometer facts, screened for rollback. Fourth, stolen-vehicle status from the NICB and open safety recalls from NHTSA. Fifth, the ownership and title facts — how many owners and how the title moved between states. Sixth, the decoded factory specification facts the VIN encodes. The free tier returns the title-brand, recall, and spec facts; the paid tier adds the detailed accident, odometer, and ownership facts.
Where do the facts in a car facts report come from?+
A car facts report is only as reliable as its sources. The title and brand facts come from NMVTIS, the National Motor Vehicle Title Information System operated by the US Department of Justice, which every state DMV, insurer, and salvage auction is legally required to report into. Open recall facts come from NHTSA, keyed directly to the VIN. Stolen-vehicle facts come from the NICB, and accident and damage facts come from licensed insurance-history providers that collect reports from carriers and body shops. The specification facts come from the VIN itself, parsed against the ISO 3779 standard and NHTSA's vPIC database. These are the same authoritative feeds the government and insurance industry rely on.
How accurate is a free car facts report?+
The facts in a free report are as accurate as the databases they come from, because they are pulled directly from those official sources rather than estimated. The title-brand facts, recall status, and decoded specs on the free tier are the same authoritative NMVTIS and NHTSA records a paid report uses — the free tier simply shows fewer of the detailed accident and ownership facts. No vehicle history report, free or paid, is ever perfectly complete, because a record only appears if the event was reported to a database in the first place. That is why the smart approach is to combine the car facts report with an independent pre-purchase inspection before you buy.
Why would I use a car facts report instead of a branded one?+
Because the facts are what protect you, and the facts are largely the same regardless of brand. The most consequential records — title brands from NMVTIS, recalls from NHTSA, theft status from the NICB — are centralized federal and industry data that every reputable provider draws from, so a $14.99 report and a $44.99 branded report see the same title history. Using a car facts report rather than paying a premium for a brand name gets you the facts that actually determine whether a car is safe and fairly priced, for a fraction of the cost. If a seller has specifically provided a branded report, use it as one input and cross-check the facts with a free VIN report here.
Ready to Get the Car Facts?
Enter any 17-character VIN to get the car facts — title-brand status, open recalls, and decoded specs, free. Upgrade to the full accident and ownership facts only if you need them.
CarCheckerVIN is an independent vehicle-history service. “Car facts report” is used here as a generic description of a VIN-based vehicle history report. Data is sourced from NMVTIS, NHTSA, the NICB, and licensed insurance-history providers. CarCheckerVIN is not affiliated with Carfax or AutoCheck; those are trademarks of their respective owners.
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