Title research

What is a salvage title

A salvage title usually signals that a vehicle was previously declared a major loss or suffered serious damage under the rules of the relevant market. It does not automatically mean the car is unusable, but it does mean the buyer should slow down and investigate carefully.

Why salvage status matters

Salvage status often affects resale value, insurance appetite, repair assumptions, and buyer confidence. Even if a vehicle was rebuilt later, the title history can still shape what future buyers, insurers, or inspectors think about risk.

What a VIN decoder can and cannot do here

A VIN decoder can help confirm the vehicle identity before you research deeper, but it does not automatically prove a salvage event. For that, buyers usually need title-history research, auction evidence, insurer records, marketplace clues, or region-specific history services.

How to research more safely

Use the VIN to confirm the exact vehicle first. Then compare auction imagery, seller claims, service records, and third-party history sources. If a title issue is suspected, a physical inspection and professional evaluation are usually more valuable than relying on one data source alone.

Frequently asked questions

Does salvage title always mean the car is bad?

Not automatically, but it usually means the risk profile is higher and the buyer should verify repairs, safety, and history much more carefully.

Can a VIN decoder alone reveal salvage title history?

No. VIN decoding helps confirm identity, but salvage evidence usually comes from title, auction, insurer, or paid history records.