Is Carfax Free? No — but this VIN check is
A Carfax report costs about $44.99 — it isn't free. But you can still check a VIN for free: CarCheckerVIN runs an NMVTIS-backed preview with no sign-up, the NHTSA recall lookup is free, and a full CarCheckerVIN report is $14.99 instead of $44.99. Enter a VIN below to see the free preview.
Free VIN Preview
Enter a 17-character VIN — we'll pull title, brand, and odometer records from NMVTIS sources, free
Free preview · No sign-up · Instant result
Quick Answer
- Is Carfax free?
- No — a Carfax report is not free. A single Carfax vehicle history report costs about $44.99. What is free: an NMVTIS-backed VIN preview from CarCheckerVIN (no sign-up), the government's NHTSA recall lookup, and title-brand data from NMVTIS-approved providers. A full CarCheckerVIN report is $14.99, about a third of Carfax's price.
- What free VIN check comes closest to a Carfax report?
- A free NMVTIS-backed preview covers the records that decide whether a car is safe to buy — title brands, salvage, and a clean-or-flagged status — because every reputable provider, Carfax included, draws title and odometer data from the same federal NMVTISdatabase. The preview won't format the full timeline for you; that's the paid report's job.
- Is there a catch with the free preview?
- No catch, but be clear on what it is: a free preview, not a complete report. It confirms the vehicle's identity and whether the title comes back clean or flagged. The detailed accident and odometer history is the $14.99 full report — still far below Carfax's $44.99.
What's free, and what you pay for
Here's the honest split. The free preview covers a car's identity and title status. The paid report adds the full accident and odometer timeline. We won't pretend the whole thing is free.
| What you want to know | Free preview |
|---|---|
| Decode VIN (year, make, model, specs) | Free |
| NMVTIS title-brand indication (clean vs flagged) | Free |
| Open NHTSA recall lookup | Free |
| Full accident & damage timeline | $14.99 report |
| Complete odometer reading history | $14.99 report |
| Salvage, total-loss & theft detail | $14.99 report |
Three genuinely free ways to check a car
NMVTIS-backed VIN preview
Enter any VIN here for a free snapshot of title status and specifications, sourced from the same federal database Carfax uses. No account, no card.
NHTSA recall lookup
Search open safety recalls free at nhtsa.gov by VIN. Any listed recall is repaired at no cost by a franchise dealer.
NMVTIS provider check
NMVTIS-approved providers must disclose title-brand and odometer-brand data. It's low-cost or free and comes straight from state DMV records.
CarCheckerVIN is an independent vehicle history service and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or owned by Carfax. Prices for Carfax are the publicly listed rates at the time of writing and may change.
Run a free VIN preview now
See whether a car comes back clean or flagged before you pay anyone $44.99. Instant NMVTIS-sourced preview, no account required.
Frequently asked
Is Carfax free?
No. A Carfax vehicle history report is a paid product — about $44.99 for a single report, $84.99 for three, or $99.99 for a month of unlimited reports. Carfax does offer some free tools, such as basic listings on its used-car marketplace and a free recall check, but the full history report you're likely looking for is not free.
How can I check a VIN for free instead?
Several genuinely free checks exist. CarCheckerVIN runs a free NMVTIS-backed VIN preview that shows whether a car comes back clean or carries a title brand, with no sign-up or credit card. The federal NHTSA recall lookup at nhtsa.gov is free, and NMVTIS-approved providers must show title-brand data. These free checks cover the essentials; a complete, formatted history timeline is a paid report.
Is CarCheckerVIN free?
The VIN preview is free — no account, no card. The full CarCheckerVIN report, with the complete odometer and accident timeline, is $14.99, which is roughly a third of Carfax's $44.99. We're upfront that the free part is a preview, not the entire report.
Why does a vehicle history report cost money at all?
Providers pay to license and compile records from NMVTIS (titles, brands, odometer), NICB (theft and total-loss), NHTSA (recalls), auctions, and other sources into one report. That data access is what you're paying for. The difference between services is mostly price and packaging, not the underlying federal records — which is why a $14.99 report can carry the same core history as a $44.99 one.
What can I see in the free preview before I pay?
The free preview decodes the VIN to confirm the year, make, model, and specifications, and gives an NMVTIS-sourced indication of whether the title comes back clean or flagged. If the preview looks clean and the seller checks out, many buyers stop there; if anything looks off, the $14.99 full report adds the detailed accident and odometer timeline.
Related tools & comparisons
Always check the VIN before you buy
Our free report reveals accidents, title brands, odometer rollback, theft records, and open recalls in seconds.
Check a VIN free
Enter any 17-character VIN for an instant, NMVTIS-sourced preview. Upgrade to the full $14.99 report only if you want the complete timeline — no $44.99 paywall, no account for the preview.
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