Arizona VIN Lookup — Free Arizona Title, Odometer & Recall History.
A Arizona VIN lookup turns a 17-character VIN into a full read on any Arizona-titled vehicle: title brands from the Arizona Motor Vehicle Division (MVD) (Salvage, Restored Salvage, Non-Repairable, Flood), odometer snapshots, open NHTSA recalls, and the decoded factory build. It reads title-brand records from the NMVTIS network — the same federal system the Arizona Motor Vehicle Division (MVD) feeds — in seconds. Enter a VIN below to run a free check — no sign-up, no card.
Free Arizona VIN Lookup — Search Any 17-Character VIN
Enter a VIN and we'll surface Arizona title brands, open recalls, decoded specs, and salvage records — instantly.
Free · No sign-up · Instant result
Quick Answer
- How do I check a VIN in Arizona?
- Find the 17-character VIN on the lower driver-side windshield, door jamb sticker, or Arizona title, and enter it in CarCheckerVIN's free Arizona VIN lookup. It queries NMVTIS for Arizona Motor Vehicle Division (MVD) title-brand history plus NHTSA for open recalls — in seconds, no sign-up.
- Does Arizona offer a free VIN check?
- The Arizona Motor Vehicle Division (MVD) does not offer a public consumer VIN history search. Arizona feeds title-brand records into the federal NMVTIS network, which CarCheckerVIN queries live — covering Salvage, Restored Salvage, Non-Repairable, Flood brands on the Arizona title chain.
- What makes a Arizona VIN check different?
- Arizona's emissions program means VIN-based emissions history is a key part of any pre-purchase check in Maricopa and Pima counties.
What a Arizona VIN Lookup Reveals
From salvage flags to open recalls, here's the full set of records a Arizona VIN lookup pulls for any vehicle titled by the Arizona Motor Vehicle Division (MVD).
Arizona Salvage brand
Issued when an insurer declares a vehicle a total loss — usually when repair costs reach roughly 65–100% of its value, depending on the state. A salvage vehicle cannot legally be driven until it is repaired, inspected, and re-titled.
Arizona Restored Salvage brand
A previously salvaged vehicle that has been repaired and re-inspected for road use. Restoration does not erase the original total-loss event from the vehicle's history.
Arizona Non-Repairable brand
Means the vehicle is too damaged to ever be legally returned to the road. It can be sold only for parts or scrap — never re-titled for driving.
Arizona Flood brand
Marks a vehicle damaged by water submersion. Flood cars frequently develop hidden electrical faults, corrosion, and mold months or years later — often after cosmetic cleanup hides the evidence.
Odometer snapshots at Arizona title transfers
Every Arizona title transfer records the odometer reading. The lookup surfaces these snapshots so you can spot a rollback on a Arizona-registered vehicle before you buy.
Open NHTSA safety recalls
Recall status is federal, but critical for any Arizona buyer. The lookup pulls the live NHTSA feed — Takata airbag, fuel pump, transmission software — attached to that specific VIN.
Decoding a VIN — What Every Arizona Buyer Should Know
Whether the car was built in the US, Canada, Mexico, Germany, Japan, or Korea, its 17-character VIN follows the same global standard. A Arizona VIN lookup decodes those characters so you know exactly where the car was built and what came off the line.
The first three characters — the World Manufacturer Identifier or WMI — tell you the country, the manufacturer, and the vehicle class. US-built passenger cars start with 1, 4, or 5. Canadian-built cars start with 2. Mexican-built cars start with 3. German cars start with W. Japanese cars start with J. Korean cars start with K. Arizona-registered vehicles come from every one of these origins.
Characters four through eight describe the vehicle attributes: model line, body style, restraint system, and engine. The ninth character is a check digit calculated from the other characters. The tenth character encodes the model year. The eleventh character is the assembly plant code. Arizona Motor Vehicle Division (MVD) clerks verify the ninth-character check digit and the plant code when processing an out-of-state title transfer — a mismatch flags the VIN as potentially altered.
Characters twelve through seventeen form the unique production serial. The lookup ties everything together and presents it in plain English: year, model, trim, engine, transmission, drivetrain, and assembly plant — plus the Arizona title chain sitting on top.
Common WMI patterns you'll see in AZ
1 / 4 / 5US-built passenger2Canadian-built3Mexican-builtJJapan-builtWGerman-builtKKorean-built
With about 5.9M vehicles registered in Arizona, the Arizona Motor Vehicle Division (MVD) title rolls pull from every WMI origin — domestic full-size trucks alongside Japanese, Korean, and German imports.
Where to Find Your VIN on a Arizona-Registered Vehicle
Every modern vehicle prints the VIN in at least five places, and Arizona adds the VIN to every state title, registration certificate, and insurance ID card. Any one of them works for a free ArizonaVIN lookup — but if they disagree, that mismatch is a strong signal the car's identity has been tampered with.
The fastest place is the lower corner of the windshield on the driver's side — look through the glass from outside. The driver-side door jamb sticker is second-easiest and also lists the tire pressure spec and manufacture date. The Arizona Certificate of Title, the Arizona Motor Vehicle Division (MVD) registration document, and the insurance ID card all print the VIN.
On older vehicles the VIN may also be stamped on the firewall under the hood or on the steering column. When a VIN inspection is required for an out-of-state or rebuilt title, inspectors physically verify the VIN against multiple locations — so use that door-jamb number when you copy the VIN for a lookup.
Five places the VIN lives on a AZ car
- Lower driver-side windshield (visible from outside)
- Driver-side door jamb sticker
- Arizona Certificate of Title
- Arizona registration document
- Insurance ID card
Found it? Drop the 17-character VIN into the form above and run a free Arizona VIN check against NMVTIS in seconds.
Lookup a Arizona VIN Right Now
Got a Arizona-registered vehicle you're about to buy? Run the VIN against NMVTIS, the Arizona Motor Vehicle Division (MVD) title chain, and the NHTSA recall feed — free, in seconds.
Common Recall Categories to Watch on AZ Vehicles
Recall status is federal — the NHTSA feed doesn't vary by state. But Arizona's used-car market makes recall verification especially important. Three categories you're most likely to encounter on a Arizona VIN lookup.
Takata airbag inflators
The largest recall in automotive history hit nearly every brand common on Arizona roads — Honda, Toyota, BMW, Ford, Nissan. A Arizona VIN lookup tells you in seconds whether the airbag inflator has been replaced. Manufacturers do the work free at any authorized dealer, regardless of ownership.
Fuel pump and stall recalls
Honda, Toyota, Nissan, and Kia have all issued fuel-pump recalls covering 2018-2020 vehicles. A sudden stall on the highway is not hypothetical — the lookup shows whether the pump on that specific VIN has been replaced.
Transmission and software campaigns
Several manufacturers have issued transmission software or hardware recalls that show up on Arizona used cars. Untreated recalls can cause shifting issues that look like ordinary wear — the VIN lookup separates the two.
Buying a used car in Arizona? Pair this Arizona VIN lookup with a focused recall check and a flood damage check for a complete picture before you put money down.
Arizona Title Brands, Lemon Law & VIN Requirements
Arizona's emissions program means VIN-based emissions history is a key part of any pre-purchase check in Maricopa and Pima counties.
The Arizona Motor Vehicle Division (MVD) records title brands including Salvage, Restored Salvage, Non-Repairable, Flood. Each is a permanent flag on the NMVTIS record. Before you commit, follow the free lookup with a full VIN history report to see every recorded event across state lines, and confirm the registration paperwork matches.
Arizona's Lemon Law covers new vehicles within 24 months or 24,000 miles. A manufacturer buyback under that law is generally disclosed to future buyers and can feed into NMVTIS, so the VIN lookup catches it before you sign.
AZ title & VIN checklist
- Run a free VIN lookup for Arizona title brands and salvage records
- Check the NHTSA feed for any open safety recalls
- Confirm the decoded trim matches the seller's description
- Verify whether Arizona requires a VIN or salvage inspection for the title type
- Get a hands-on mechanic inspection before you sign
- Confirm any required emissions or safety certificate is current
Run the lookup first — paste the VIN here:
Related VIN Checks for Arizona Owners
A Arizona VIN lookup is the entry point. These focused checks dig into specific records when something looks off — or when you want a complete picture before you buy a Arizona-registered car.
Always check the VIN before you buy
Our free report reveals accidents, title brands, odometer rollback, theft records, and open recalls in seconds.
Arizona VIN Lookup — Frequently Asked Questions
The questions Arizona owners and used-car buyers ask most when they want to look up a VIN.
How do I check a VIN in Arizona?+
To check a VIN in Arizona, find the 17-character VIN on the lower driver-side corner of the windshield, the door jamb sticker, the Arizona Certificate of Title, the Arizona registration, or the insurance card, then enter it into the free Arizona VIN lookup on this page. The tool validates the 17-character format and excludes I, O, and Q, then queries NMVTIS for Arizona and out-of-state title brands, NHTSA for open recalls, and our decoder for factory specs. Results come back in seconds — no sign-up required.
Does the Arizona Motor Vehicle Division (MVD) offer a free VIN check?+
The Arizona Motor Vehicle Division (MVD) does not run a public consumer-facing VIN history lookup. Arizona feeds title-brand data into NMVTIS (the federal National Motor Vehicle Title Information System), which is accessed by approved data providers rather than a state-run consumer portal. CarCheckerVIN's free Arizona VIN lookup surfaces the same NMVTIS-sourced title-brand history the Arizona Motor Vehicle Division (MVD) uses when processing registrations, plus live NHTSA recall status. For questions about your specific Arizona title record, you can also contact the Arizona Motor Vehicle Division (MVD) directly.
What title brands does Arizona use?+
Arizona recognizes title brands including Salvage, Restored Salvage, Non-Repairable, Flood. On a VIN report, each brand appears as a dated entry against the Arizona title and permanently follows the VIN through NMVTIS even if the vehicle is later moved to another state. For example, a "Salvage" brand issued when an insurer declares a vehicle a total loss — usually when repair costs reach roughly 65–100% of its value, depending on the state. A salvage vehicle cannot legally be driven until it is repaired, inspected, and re-titled.
What should Arizona buyers know before buying used?+
Arizona's emissions program means VIN-based emissions history is a key part of any pre-purchase check in Maricopa and Pima counties. That makes a VIN lookup the sensible first step: it reads the Arizona Motor Vehicle Division (MVD) title brands, odometer snapshots, and any open NHTSA recalls from NMVTIS before you put money down. Pair the free lookup with a hands-on mechanic inspection for the complete picture.
Is Arizona VIN lookup really free?+
Yes. The Arizona VIN lookup on this page is completely free with no sign-up, no credit card, and no hidden charges. You enter the 17-character VIN and we return the decoded factory specs (year, trim, engine, plant), a title-brand summary from NMVTIS covering all 50 states plus Arizona specifically, and any open recalls from the live NHTSA feed. A paid full history report is available if you need every dated line item, but the free Arizona VIN check is sufficient for most pre-purchase decisions.
How does the Arizona lemon law affect a VIN check?+
Arizona's Lemon Law covers new vehicles within 24 months or 24,000 miles. A vehicle repurchased by a manufacturer under a lemon law is generally required to be disclosed to future buyers, and that disclosure can feed into NMVTIS. A Arizona VIN lookup will surface a lemon-law or manufacturer-buyback history if one exists, so a car that looks clean at a glance but was previously reacquired gets caught before you sign.
Ready to Lookup a Arizona VIN?
Enter any 17-character VIN to run a free Arizona VIN check against NMVTIS, the Arizona Motor Vehicle Division (MVD) title chain, and the live NHTSA recall feed. No account required.
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