Carvana Delivers Undisclosed Damage and Leaves Credit Inquiry After Return
A buyer received a vehicle with undisclosed front-end damage, bald tires, and a non-functional touchscreen — none visible in listing photos. After returning the car, a hard credit inquiry remained on the buyer's report with no mechanism for removal. Reflects the risk of no-inspection online vehicle transactions when listing accuracy is not enforced.
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Similar Problems
surfaced semanticallyOnline Car Dealers Install Safety-Hazard Components Without Disclosure
Online used car platforms install tires and components that are older or more degraded than the vehicle itself without disclosing this in vehicle condition reports. When customers flag these safety hazards, dealers refuse to remedy them citing as-is sale terms. Buyers have no independent verification mechanism before committing to purchase under online-only sales models.
Carvana Sold Vehicle With Undisclosed Prior Accident Damage
Customer purchased vehicle advertised with only minor cosmetic issues but discovered extensive undisclosed damage including undercarriage problems, alignment issues, replaced door, and indicators of prior accident. Carvana refused buyback request.
Online Used Car Dealers Deliver Vehicles with Undisclosed Pre-Purchase Accident History
Online used car platforms fail to disclose prior accident records on vehicles, delivering damaged goods to buyers who only learn about incidents later through official letters or third-party reports. The lack of mandatory pre-delivery disclosure leaves consumers holding vehicles with hidden structural damage and no legal recourse. This information asymmetry is structural to the online-only purchase model where buyers cannot inspect before committing.
Carvana requires buyer to pay diagnostic fee to prove undisclosed prior damage
A Carvana vehicle exhibited signs of prior collision damage and improper repair immediately after purchase, but the company required the buyer to pay a $195 diagnostic fee before reviewing any claim—placing the burden of proof on the consumer for damage Carvana should have disclosed.
Online Used Car Sales Conceal Structural Defects That Surface After Purchase
Consumers purchasing used vehicles through online-only dealers discover serious defects — including water ingress and structural damage — only after taking delivery. Pre-sale inspections claimed by the dealer fail to detect or disclose these issues, and return windows are too short for latent defects to manifest. Buyers are left fighting for refunds outside policy windows for defects that predated the sale.
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